Resolving the cause of recurrent Plasmodium vivax malaria probabilistically
Nature Communications 10(1)
Article 2019 English
Authors
AT
Aimee R. Taylor
JW
James A Watson
CC
Cindy S. Chu
Abstract
1 min read
Relapses arising from dormant liver-stage Plasmodium vivax parasites (hypnozoites) are a major cause of vivax malaria. However, in endemic areas, a recurrent blood-stage infection following treatment can be hypnozoite-derived (relapse), a blood-stage treatment failure (recrudescence), or a newly acquired infection (reinfection). Each of these requires a different prevention strategy, but it was not previously possible to distinguish between them reliably. We show that individual vivax malaria recurrences can be characterised probabilistically by combined modelling of time-to-event and genetic data within a framework incorporating identity-by-descent. Analysis of pooled patient data on 1441 recurrent P. vivax infections in 1299 patients on the Thailand–Myanmar border observed over 1000 patient follow-up years shows that, without primaquine radical curative treatment, 3 in 4 patients relapse. In contrast, after supervised high-dose primaquine only 1 in 40 relapse. In this region of frequent relapsing P. vivax , failure rates after supervised high-dose primaquine are significantly lower (∼3%) than estimated previously.
Aimee R. Taylor, James A Watson, Cindy S. Chu, Kanokpich Puaprasert, Jureeporn Duanguppama, Nicholas P. J. Day, François Nosten, Daniel E. Neafsey, Caroline O. Buckee, Mallika Imwong, Sir Nicholas White
Mallika Imwong, Georges Snounou, Sasithon Pukrittayakamee, Naowarat Tanomsing, Jung Ryong Kim, Amitab Nandy, Jean‐Paul Guthmann, François Nosten, Jane M. Carlton, Sornchai Looareesuwan, Shalini Nair, Daniel Sudimack, Nicholas Day, Timothy J. C. Anderson, Sir Nicholas White
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