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doi: 10.5061/dryad.hv01f
Background: Man to mosquito transmission of malaria depends on the presence of the sexual stage parasites, gametocytes, that often circulate at low densities. Gametocyte densities below the microscopical threshold of detection may be sufficient to infect mosquitoes but the importance of submicroscopical gametocyte carriage in different transmission settings is unknown. Methodology/Principal Findings: Membrane feeding experiments were carried out on 80 children below 14 years of age at the end of the wet season in an area of seasonal malaria transmission in Burkina Faso. Gametocytes were quantified by microscopy and by Pfs25-based quantitative nucleic acid sequence-based amplification assay (QT-NASBA). The children's infectiousness was determined by membrane feeding experiments in which a venous blood sample was offered to locally reared Anopheles mosquitoes. Gametocytes were detected in 30.0% (24/80) of the children by microscopy compared to 91.6% (65/71) by QT-NASBA (p<0.001). We observed a strong association between QT-NASBA gametocyte density and infection rates (p = 0.007). Children with microscopically detectable gametocytes were more likely to be infectious (68.2% compared to 31.7% of carriers of submicroscopical gametocytes, p = 0.001), and on average infected more mosquitoes (13.2% compared to 2.3%, p<0.001). However, because of the high prevalence of submicroscopical gametocyte carriage in the study population, carriers of sub-microscopical gametocytes were responsible for 24.2% of the malaria transmission in this population. Conclusions/Significance: Submicroscopical gametocyte carriage is common in an area of seasonal transmission in Burkina Faso and contributes substantially to the human infectious reservoir. Submicroscopical gametocyte carriage should therefore be considered when implementing interventions that aim to reduce malaria transmission.
Characteristics of membrane feeding assay blood donors and mosquito infectionshost = id of the host. calib_no = the calibration line number used to convert TTP (time to positivity readouts) from QT-NASBA into gametocyte density. ttp = time to positivity readout from QT-NASBA used to generate gametocyte density estimate. age = age of blood donor. asexual = asexual parasite density of blood donor (estimated using microscopy). no_dissected = number of mosquitoes dissected to determine mosquito infection. no_infected = number of mosquitoes dissected with observable oocystsBF_data.xlsx
Plasmodium falciparum, malaria, Anopheles gambiae, Membrane feeding assay, Malaria
Plasmodium falciparum, malaria, Anopheles gambiae, Membrane feeding assay, Malaria
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