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Malaria Resilience in South America: Epidemiology, Vector Biology, and Immunology Insights from the Amazonian International Center of Excellence in Malaria Research Network in Peru and Brazil

The 1990s saw the rapid reemergence of malaria in Amazonia, where it remains an important public health priority in South America. The Amazonian International Center of Excellence in Malaria Research (ICEMR) was designed to take a multidisciplinary approach toward identifying novel malaria control a...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Torres, Katherine, Ferreira, Marcelo U., Castro, Marcia C., Escalante, Ananias A., Conn, Jan E., Villasis, Elizabeth, da Silva Araujo, Maisa, Almeida, Gregorio, Rodrigues, Priscila T., Corder, Rodrigo M., Fernandes, Anderson R. J., Calil, Priscila R., Ladeia, Winni A., Garcia-Castillo, Stefano S., Gomez, Joaquin, do Valle Antonelli, Lis Ribeiro, Gazzinelli, Ricardo T., Golenbock, Douglas T., Llanos-Cuentas, Alejandro, Gamboa, Dionicia, Vinetz, Joseph M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9662219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36228921
http://dx.doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.22-0127
Descripción
Sumario:The 1990s saw the rapid reemergence of malaria in Amazonia, where it remains an important public health priority in South America. The Amazonian International Center of Excellence in Malaria Research (ICEMR) was designed to take a multidisciplinary approach toward identifying novel malaria control and elimination strategies. Based on geographically and epidemiologically distinct sites in the Northeastern Peruvian and Western Brazilian Amazon regions, synergistic projects integrate malaria epidemiology, vector biology, and immunology. The Amazonian ICEMR’s overarching goal is to understand how human behavior and other sociodemographic features of human reservoirs of transmission—predominantly asymptomatically parasitemic people—interact with the major Amazonian malaria vector, Nyssorhynchus (formerly Anopheles) darlingi, and with human immune responses to maintain malaria resilience and continued endemicity in a hypoendemic setting. Here, we will review Amazonian ICEMR’s achievements on the synergies among malaria epidemiology, Plasmodium-vector interactions, and immune response, and how those provide a roadmap for further research, and, most importantly, point toward how to achieve malaria control and elimination in the Americas.