Clonal outbreak of Plasmodium falciparum infection in eastern Panama.

Journal: The Journal Of Infectious Diseases
Published:
Abstract

Identifying the source of resurgent parasites is paramount to a strategic, successful intervention for malaria elimination. Although the malaria incidence in Panama is low, a recent outbreak resulted in a 6-fold increase in reported cases. We hypothesized that parasites sampled from this epidemic might be related and exhibit a clonal population structure. We tested the genetic relatedness of parasites, using informative single-nucleotide polymorphisms and drug resistance loci. We found that parasites were clustered into 3 clonal subpopulations and were related to parasites from Colombia. Two clusters of Panamanian parasites shared identical drug resistance haplotypes, and all clusters shared a chloroquine-resistance genotype matching the pfcrt haplotype of Colombian origin. Our findings suggest these resurgent parasite populations are highly clonal and that the high clonality likely resulted from epidemic expansion of imported or vestigial cases. Malaria outbreak investigations that use genetic tools can illuminate potential sources of epidemic malaria and guide strategies to prevent further resurgence in areas where malaria has been eliminated.

Authors
Nicanor Obaldia, Nicholas Baro, Jose Calzada, Ana Santamaria, Rachel Daniels, Wesley Wong, Hsiao-han Chang, Elizabeth Hamilton, Myriam Arevalo Herrera, Socrates Herrera, Dyann Wirth, Daniel Hartl, Matthias Marti, Sarah Volkman
Relevant Conditions

Malaria