Plasmodium vivax Infections over 3 Years in Duffy Blood Group Negative Malians in Bandiagara, Mali

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Abstract

Plasmodium vivax was thought to infect only the erythrocytes of Duffy blood group positive people. In the last decade, P. vivax has appeared throughout Africa, both in areas where Duffy positive and negative people live side by side asin Madagascar and Ethiopia and in areas where people are primarily Duffy negative, suchas in western Kenya. We performed quantitative polymerase chain reaction onblood samples dried ontofilter papertodetermine the prevalence of P. vivax and Plasmodium falciparum in a cohort of 300 children (newborn to 6 years of age) in Bandiagara, a Sahelian area of Mali, west Africa, where the people are Duffy negative. We report 1-3 occurrences of P. vivax in each of 25 Duffy-negative children at six time points over two rainy seasons and the beginning of the third season. The prevalence of P. vivax infection was 2.0-2.5% at every time point (June 2009 to June 2010). All children with P. vivax infections were asymptomatic and afebrile, and parasite densities were extremely low. Anemia, however, was the main burden of infection. Plasmodium vivax could become a burden to sub-Saharan Africa, and the evidence of P. vivax existence needs to be taken into consideration in designing malaria control and elimination strategies in Africa.

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Niangaly, A., Gunalan, K., Ouattara, A., Coulibaly, D., Sá, J. M., Adams, M., … Doumbo, O. K. (2017). Plasmodium vivax Infections over 3 Years in Duffy Blood Group Negative Malians in Bandiagara, Mali. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 97(3), 744–752. https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.17-0254

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