Parasite Burden and Severity of Malaria in Tanzanian Children

New England Journal of Medicine
May 8, 2014 Vol. 370 No. 19
http://www.nejm.org/toc/nejm/medical-journal

Original Article
Parasite Burden and Severity of Malaria in Tanzanian Children
Bronner P. Gonçalves, M.D., Chiung-Yu Huang, Ph.D., Robert Morrison, M.Sc., Sarah Holte, Ph.D., Edward Kabyemela, M.D., Ph.D., D. Rebecca Prevots, Ph.D., Michal Fried, Ph.D., and Patrick E. Duffy, M.D.
DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1303944
Abstract
Background
Severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria is a major cause of death in children. The contribution of the parasite burden to the pathogenesis of severe malaria has been controversial.
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Methods
We documented P. falciparum infection and disease in Tanzanian children followed from birth for an average of 2 years and for as long as 4 years.
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Results
Of the 882 children in our study, 102 had severe malaria, but only 3 had more than two episodes. More than half of first episodes of severe malaria occurred after a second infection. Although parasite levels were higher on average when children had severe rather than mild disease, most children (67 of 102) had high-density infection (>2500 parasites per 200 white cells) with only mild symptoms before severe malaria, after severe malaria, or both. The incidence of severe malaria decreased considerably after infancy, whereas the incidence of high-density infection was similar among all age groups. Infections before and after episodes of severe malaria were associated with similar parasite densities. Nonuse of bed nets, placental malaria at the time of a woman’s second or subsequent delivery, high-transmission season, and absence of the sickle cell trait increased severe-malaria risk and parasite density during infections.
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Conclusions
Resistance to severe malaria was not acquired after one or two mild infections. Although the parasite burden was higher on average during episodes of severe malaria, a high parasite burden was often insufficient to cause severe malaria even in children who later were susceptible. The diverging rates of severe disease and high-density infection after infancy, as well as the similar parasite burdens before and after severe malaria, indicate that naturally acquired resistance to severe malaria is not explained by improved control of parasite density. (Funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and others.)