Study finds that low-level infections are common in areas of low malaria transmission.
People who have low-level malaria infections that are not detected by standard tests may be a source of up to 20-50 per cent of onward transmissions, a new study has found. These carriers have a low number of parasites in their blood and are usually unaware that they have malaria, but mosquitoes taking a bite on these people can still become infected and then go on to transmit the parasite to other people. Experts from Imperial College London and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine , with colleagues from Radboud University Nijmegen , the Netherlands and Centre National de Recherche et de Formation sur le Paludisme in Burkina Faso, put together data from 106 surveys from endemic countries which tested for malaria using both sensitive molecular techniques and routine microscopy. The sensitive methods reveal on average twice as many malaria infections, showing that low-level, submicroscopic infection is common. The authors show that submicroscopic malaria carriage is more likely in areas of low malaria transmission, in adults, and in people with long-term, chronic malaria infections. Although these carriers are much less likely to transmit their infection via mosquitoes than people who have a greater number of parasites, there are so many of them in some areas that they are likely to be a significant source of transmission. Lucy Okell , from the Medical Research Council (MRC) Centre for Outbreak Analysis and Modelling at Imperial College London and lead author of the study, commented: "The data show that low-density, submicroscopic malaria infections are most common in areas with low levels of malaria transmission, which is surprising since people are less likely to have immunity from previous malaria attacks.
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