Plasmodium falciparum infection and naturally acquired immunity to malaria antigens among Ghanaian children in northern Ghana

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Plasmodium falciparum infection and naturally acquired immunity to malaria antigens among Ghanaian children in northern Ghana. / Seidu, Zakaria; Lamptey, Helena; Lopez-Perez, Mary; Whittle, Nora Owusuwaa; Oppong, Stephen Kwesi; Kyei-Baafour, Eric; Pobee, Abigail Naa Adjorkor; Adjei, George Obeng; Hviid, Lars; Ofori, Michael F.

In: Parasite Epidemiology and Control, Vol. 22, 2023, p. e00317.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Seidu, Z, Lamptey, H, Lopez-Perez, M, Whittle, NO, Oppong, SK, Kyei-Baafour, E, Pobee, ANA, Adjei, GO, Hviid, L & Ofori, MF 2023, 'Plasmodium falciparum infection and naturally acquired immunity to malaria antigens among Ghanaian children in northern Ghana', Parasite Epidemiology and Control, vol. 22, pp. e00317. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.parepi.2023.e00317

APA

Seidu, Z., Lamptey, H., Lopez-Perez, M., Whittle, N. O., Oppong, S. K., Kyei-Baafour, E., Pobee, A. N. A., Adjei, G. O., Hviid, L., & Ofori, M. F. (2023). Plasmodium falciparum infection and naturally acquired immunity to malaria antigens among Ghanaian children in northern Ghana. Parasite Epidemiology and Control, 22, e00317. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.parepi.2023.e00317

Vancouver

Seidu Z, Lamptey H, Lopez-Perez M, Whittle NO, Oppong SK, Kyei-Baafour E et al. Plasmodium falciparum infection and naturally acquired immunity to malaria antigens among Ghanaian children in northern Ghana. Parasite Epidemiology and Control. 2023;22:e00317. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.parepi.2023.e00317

Author

Seidu, Zakaria ; Lamptey, Helena ; Lopez-Perez, Mary ; Whittle, Nora Owusuwaa ; Oppong, Stephen Kwesi ; Kyei-Baafour, Eric ; Pobee, Abigail Naa Adjorkor ; Adjei, George Obeng ; Hviid, Lars ; Ofori, Michael F. / Plasmodium falciparum infection and naturally acquired immunity to malaria antigens among Ghanaian children in northern Ghana. In: Parasite Epidemiology and Control. 2023 ; Vol. 22. pp. e00317.

Bibtex

@article{74fe239b12e346fd8579b0ee45a6f5e0,
title = "Plasmodium falciparum infection and naturally acquired immunity to malaria antigens among Ghanaian children in northern Ghana",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: The surge in malaria cases and deaths in recent years, particularly in Africa, despite the widespread implementation of malaria-control measures could be due to inefficiencies in malaria control and prevention measures in malaria-endemic communities. In this context, this study provides the malaria situation report among children in three Municipalities in Northern Ghana, where Seasonal Malaria Chemotherapy (SMC) is implemented by Ghana Health Service (GHS).METHODS: A cross-sectional household survey was carried out to assess the malaria knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) and malaria prevalence in 394 households in 13 rural communities in the Kumbugu, Nanton and Tolon Municipalities, Northern Region, Ghana. This was followed by screening for P. falciparum infection with anti-HRP2 RDT and PCR among children 1-17 years in the households. Plasma levels of IgG specific for crude P. falciparum antigen (3D7) and four recombinant malaria antigens (CSP, GLURP, MSP3, and Pfs230) were assessed by ELISA. The malaria and parasitaemia data were converted into frequency and subgroup proportions and disaggregated by study sites and demographic information of the participants. The ELISA data was converted to arbitrary units (AU) and similarly compared across study sites and demographic information.RESULTS: The P. falciparum infection rate and frequency of malaria were high in the study areas with significant age-dependent and inter-community differences, which were reflected by differences in plasma levels of P. falciparum-specific IgG. Over 60% of households reported the use of bed nets and indoor insecticide sprays/coils, and 14% mentioned bush clearing around homes (14%) as malaria preventive measures. Community health centres were the preferred place for households (88%) to seek malaria treatment but over-the-counter drug stores were the major source (66%) of their antimalarials. Overall, malaria preventive and treatment practices were sub-optimal.CONCLUSIONS: P. falciparum infection and malaria are still high in the studied communities, indicating that preventive and control measures against the disease in the region remain inadequate. Efforts to ensure high SMC compliance and to improve preventative and treatment practices thus seem cost-beneficial {"}low-hanging fruits{"} in the fight against malaria in the Northern Region of Ghana.",
author = "Zakaria Seidu and Helena Lamptey and Mary Lopez-Perez and Whittle, {Nora Owusuwaa} and Oppong, {Stephen Kwesi} and Eric Kyei-Baafour and Pobee, {Abigail Naa Adjorkor} and Adjei, {George Obeng} and Lars Hviid and Ofori, {Michael F}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2023 The Authors.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.parepi.2023.e00317",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "e00317",
journal = "Parasite Epidemiology and Control",
issn = "2405-6731",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Plasmodium falciparum infection and naturally acquired immunity to malaria antigens among Ghanaian children in northern Ghana

AU - Seidu, Zakaria

AU - Lamptey, Helena

AU - Lopez-Perez, Mary

AU - Whittle, Nora Owusuwaa

AU - Oppong, Stephen Kwesi

AU - Kyei-Baafour, Eric

AU - Pobee, Abigail Naa Adjorkor

AU - Adjei, George Obeng

AU - Hviid, Lars

AU - Ofori, Michael F

N1 - © 2023 The Authors.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - BACKGROUND: The surge in malaria cases and deaths in recent years, particularly in Africa, despite the widespread implementation of malaria-control measures could be due to inefficiencies in malaria control and prevention measures in malaria-endemic communities. In this context, this study provides the malaria situation report among children in three Municipalities in Northern Ghana, where Seasonal Malaria Chemotherapy (SMC) is implemented by Ghana Health Service (GHS).METHODS: A cross-sectional household survey was carried out to assess the malaria knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) and malaria prevalence in 394 households in 13 rural communities in the Kumbugu, Nanton and Tolon Municipalities, Northern Region, Ghana. This was followed by screening for P. falciparum infection with anti-HRP2 RDT and PCR among children 1-17 years in the households. Plasma levels of IgG specific for crude P. falciparum antigen (3D7) and four recombinant malaria antigens (CSP, GLURP, MSP3, and Pfs230) were assessed by ELISA. The malaria and parasitaemia data were converted into frequency and subgroup proportions and disaggregated by study sites and demographic information of the participants. The ELISA data was converted to arbitrary units (AU) and similarly compared across study sites and demographic information.RESULTS: The P. falciparum infection rate and frequency of malaria were high in the study areas with significant age-dependent and inter-community differences, which were reflected by differences in plasma levels of P. falciparum-specific IgG. Over 60% of households reported the use of bed nets and indoor insecticide sprays/coils, and 14% mentioned bush clearing around homes (14%) as malaria preventive measures. Community health centres were the preferred place for households (88%) to seek malaria treatment but over-the-counter drug stores were the major source (66%) of their antimalarials. Overall, malaria preventive and treatment practices were sub-optimal.CONCLUSIONS: P. falciparum infection and malaria are still high in the studied communities, indicating that preventive and control measures against the disease in the region remain inadequate. Efforts to ensure high SMC compliance and to improve preventative and treatment practices thus seem cost-beneficial "low-hanging fruits" in the fight against malaria in the Northern Region of Ghana.

AB - BACKGROUND: The surge in malaria cases and deaths in recent years, particularly in Africa, despite the widespread implementation of malaria-control measures could be due to inefficiencies in malaria control and prevention measures in malaria-endemic communities. In this context, this study provides the malaria situation report among children in three Municipalities in Northern Ghana, where Seasonal Malaria Chemotherapy (SMC) is implemented by Ghana Health Service (GHS).METHODS: A cross-sectional household survey was carried out to assess the malaria knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) and malaria prevalence in 394 households in 13 rural communities in the Kumbugu, Nanton and Tolon Municipalities, Northern Region, Ghana. This was followed by screening for P. falciparum infection with anti-HRP2 RDT and PCR among children 1-17 years in the households. Plasma levels of IgG specific for crude P. falciparum antigen (3D7) and four recombinant malaria antigens (CSP, GLURP, MSP3, and Pfs230) were assessed by ELISA. The malaria and parasitaemia data were converted into frequency and subgroup proportions and disaggregated by study sites and demographic information of the participants. The ELISA data was converted to arbitrary units (AU) and similarly compared across study sites and demographic information.RESULTS: The P. falciparum infection rate and frequency of malaria were high in the study areas with significant age-dependent and inter-community differences, which were reflected by differences in plasma levels of P. falciparum-specific IgG. Over 60% of households reported the use of bed nets and indoor insecticide sprays/coils, and 14% mentioned bush clearing around homes (14%) as malaria preventive measures. Community health centres were the preferred place for households (88%) to seek malaria treatment but over-the-counter drug stores were the major source (66%) of their antimalarials. Overall, malaria preventive and treatment practices were sub-optimal.CONCLUSIONS: P. falciparum infection and malaria are still high in the studied communities, indicating that preventive and control measures against the disease in the region remain inadequate. Efforts to ensure high SMC compliance and to improve preventative and treatment practices thus seem cost-beneficial "low-hanging fruits" in the fight against malaria in the Northern Region of Ghana.

U2 - 10.1016/j.parepi.2023.e00317

DO - 10.1016/j.parepi.2023.e00317

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37501921

VL - 22

SP - e00317

JO - Parasite Epidemiology and Control

JF - Parasite Epidemiology and Control

SN - 2405-6731

ER -

ID: 360458777