Evidence for a role of Anopheles stephensi in the spread of drug- and diagnosis-resistant malaria in Africa

Anopheles stephensi , an Asian malaria vector, continues to expand across Africa. The vector is now firmly established in urban settings in the Horn of Africa. Its presence in areas where malaria resurged suggested a possible role in causing malaria outbreaks. Here, using a prospective case–control...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature medicine 2023-12, Vol.29 (12), p.3203-3211
Hauptverfasser: Emiru, Tadele, Getachew, Dejene, Murphy, Maxwell, Sedda, Luigi, Ejigu, Legesse Alamerie, Bulto, Mikiyas Gebremichael, Byrne, Isabel, Demisse, Mulugeta, Abdo, Melat, Chali, Wakweya, Elliott, Aaron, Vickers, Eric Neubauer, Aranda-Díaz, Andrés, Alemayehu, Lina, Behaksera, Sinknesh W., Jebessa, Gutema, Dinka, Hunduma, Tsegaye, Tizita, Teka, Hiwot, Chibsa, Sheleme, Mumba, Peter, Girma, Samuel, Hwang, Jimee, Yoshimizu, Melissa, Sutcliffe, Alice, Taffese, Hiwot Solomon, Bayissa, Gudissa Aseffa, Zohdy, Sarah, Tongren, Jon Eric, Drakeley, Chris, Greenhouse, Bryan, Bousema, Teun, Tadesse, Fitsum G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Anopheles stephensi , an Asian malaria vector, continues to expand across Africa. The vector is now firmly established in urban settings in the Horn of Africa. Its presence in areas where malaria resurged suggested a possible role in causing malaria outbreaks. Here, using a prospective case–control design, we investigated the role of An. stephensi in transmission following a malaria outbreak in Dire Dawa, Ethiopia in April–July 2022. Screening contacts of patients with malaria and febrile controls revealed spatial clustering of Plasmodium falciparum infections around patients with malaria in strong association with the presence of An. stephensi in the household vicinity . Plasmodium sporozoites were detected in these mosquitoes. This outbreak involved clonal propagation of parasites with molecular signatures of artemisinin and diagnostic resistance. To our knowledge, this study provides the strongest evidence so far for a role of An. stephensi in driving an urban malaria outbreak in Africa, highlighting the major public health threat posed by this fast-spreading mosquito. Evidence that a dry-season outbreak of malaria in Dire Dawa, Ethiopia is caused by Anopheles stephensi carrying Plasmodium falciparum with diagnostic and drug resistance mutations calls for heightened vector surveillance in both urban and rural settings.
ISSN:1078-8956
1546-170X
1546-170X
DOI:10.1038/s41591-023-02641-9