Plasmodium falciparum is evolving to escape malaria rapid diagnostic tests in Ethiopia

被引:0
作者
Sindew M. Feleke
Emily N. Reichert
Hussein Mohammed
Bokretsion G. Brhane
Kalkidan Mekete
Hassen Mamo
Beyene Petros
Hiwot Solomon
Ebba Abate
Chris Hennelly
Madeline Denton
Corinna Keeler
Nicholas J. Hathaway
Jonathan J. Juliano
Jeffrey A. Bailey
Eric Rogier
Jane Cunningham
Ozkan Aydemir
Jonathan B. Parr
机构
[1] Ethiopian Public Health Institute,Institute for Global Health and Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases and Department of Geography
[2] University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,undefined
[3] Department of Microbial,undefined
[4] Cellular and Molecular Biology,undefined
[5] College of Natural and Computational Sciences,undefined
[6] Addis Ababa University,undefined
[7] Ministry of Health,undefined
[8] Department of Medicine,undefined
[9] University of Massachusetts Medical School,undefined
[10] Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine,undefined
[11] Warren Alpert Medical School,undefined
[12] Brown University,undefined
[13] Division of Parasitic Diseases and Malaria,undefined
[14] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,undefined
[15] Global Malaria Programme,undefined
[16] World Health Organization,undefined
来源
Nature Microbiology | 2021年 / 6卷
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摘要
In Africa, most rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) for falciparum malaria recognize histidine-rich protein 2 antigen. Plasmodium falciparum parasites lacking histidine-rich protein 2 (pfhrp2) and 3 (pfhrp3) genes escape detection by these RDTs, but it is not known whether these deletions confer sufficient selective advantage to drive rapid population expansion. By studying blood samples from a cohort of 12,572 participants enroled in a prospective, cross-sectional survey along Ethiopia’s borders with Eritrea, Sudan and South Sudan using RDTs, PCR, an ultrasensitive bead-based immunoassay for antigen detection and next-generation sequencing, we estimate that histidine-rich protein 2-based RDTs would miss 9.7% (95% confidence interval 8.5–11.1) of P. falciparum malaria cases owing to pfhrp2 deletion. We applied a molecular inversion probe-targeted deep sequencing approach to identify distinct subtelomeric deletion patterns and well-established pfhrp3 deletions and to uncover recent expansion of a singular pfhrp2 deletion in all regions sampled. We propose a model in which pfhrp3 deletions have arisen independently multiple times, followed by strong positive selection for pfhrp2 deletion owing to RDT-based test-and-treatment. Existing diagnostic strategies need to be urgently reconsidered in Ethiopia, and improved surveillance for pfhrp2 deletion is needed throughout the Horn of Africa.
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页码:1289 / 1299
页数:10
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