4.5 Article

Scientific Findings of the Southern and Central Africa International Center of Excellence for Malaria Research: Ten Years of Malaria Control Impact Assessments in Hypo-, Meso-, and Holoendemic Transmission Zones in Zambia and Zimbabwe

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AMER SOC TROP MED & HYGIENE
DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.21-1287

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [U19AI089680]
  2. Bloomberg Philanthropies
  3. Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute

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Over the past decade, the Southern and Central Africa International Center of Excellence for Malaria Research has conducted assessments in different malaria endemic areas in Zambia and Zimbabwe, utilizing multidisciplinary scientific approaches to understand the patterns and causes of malaria transmission. Persistent malaria burden is explained by factors such as rural poverty, cryptic and novel mosquito vectors, residual parasites, and stockouts of essential malaria commodities, despite current interventions.
For a decade, the Southern and Central Africa International Center of Excellence for Malaria Research has operated with local partners across study sites in Zambia and Zimbabwe that range from hypo- to holoendemic and vary ecologically and entomologically. The burden of malaria and the impact of control measures were assessed in longitudinal cohorts, cross-sectional surveys, passive and reactive case detection, and other observational designs that incorporated multidisciplinary scientific approaches: classical epidemiology, geospatial science, serosurveillance, parasite and mosquito genetics, and vector bionomics. Findings to date have helped elaborate the patterns and possible causes of sustained low-to-moderate transmission in southern Zambia and eastern Zimbabwe and recalcitrant high transmission and fatality in northern Zambia. Cryptic and novel mosquito vectors, asymptomatic parasite reservoirs in older children, residual parasitemia and gametocytemia after treatment, indoor residual spraying timed dyssynchronously to vector abundance, and stockouts of essential malaria commodities, all in the context of intractable rural poverty, appear to explain the persistent malaria burden despite current interventions. Ongoing studies of high-resolution transmission chains, parasite population structures, long-term malaria periodicity, and molecular entomology are further helping to lay new avenues for malaria control in southern and central Africa and similar settings.

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