Simian malaria: a narrative review on emergence, epidemiology and threat to global malaria elimination

Simian malaria from wild non-human primate populations is increasingly recognised as a public health threat and is now the main cause of human malaria in Malaysia and some regions of Brazil. In 2022, Malaysia became the first country not to achieve malaria elimination due to zoonotic simian malaria....

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet infectious diseases 2023-12, Vol.23 (12), p.e520-e532
Hauptverfasser: Fornace, Kimberly M, Zorello Laporta, Gabriel, Vythilingham, Indra, Chua, Tock Hing, Ahmed, Kamruddin, Jeyaprakasam, Nantha K, de Castro Duarte, Ana Maria Ribeiro, Amir, Amirah, Phang, Wei Kit, Drakeley, Chris, Sallum, Maria Anice M, Lau, Yee Ling
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creator Fornace, Kimberly M
Zorello Laporta, Gabriel
Vythilingham, Indra
Chua, Tock Hing
Ahmed, Kamruddin
Jeyaprakasam, Nantha K
de Castro Duarte, Ana Maria Ribeiro
Amir, Amirah
Phang, Wei Kit
Drakeley, Chris
Sallum, Maria Anice M
Lau, Yee Ling
description Simian malaria from wild non-human primate populations is increasingly recognised as a public health threat and is now the main cause of human malaria in Malaysia and some regions of Brazil. In 2022, Malaysia became the first country not to achieve malaria elimination due to zoonotic simian malaria. We review the global distribution and drivers of simian malaria and identify priorities for diagnosis, treatment, surveillance, and control. Environmental change is driving closer interactions between humans and wildlife, with malaria parasites from non-human primates spilling over into human populations and human malaria parasites spilling back into wild non-human primate populations. These complex transmission cycles require new molecular and epidemiological approaches to track parasite spread. Current methods of malaria control are ineffective, with wildlife reservoirs and primarily outdoor-biting mosquito vectors urgently requiring the development of novel control strategies. Without these, simian malaria has the potential to undermine malaria elimination globally.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S1473-3099(23)00298-0
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subjects 20th century
Animal populations
Animals
Animals, Wild
Blood
Brazil
Environmental changes
Epidemiology
Health risks
Human populations
Humans
Infections
Infectious diseases
Insecticides
Malaria
Malaria - epidemiology
Malaria - prevention & control
Monkeys & apes
Mosquito Vectors
Parasites
Populations
Primates
Protozoa
Public health
Spilling
Surveillance
Vector-borne diseases
Vectors
Wildlife
Zoonoses
title Simian malaria: a narrative review on emergence, epidemiology and threat to global malaria elimination
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