Assessment of Plasmodium vivax transmission and asymptomatic carriage risk among artisanal gold miners in western French Guiana, 2014–2020
Alice Sanna, Yann Lambert, Stéphane Pelleau, Lise Musset, Yassamine Lazrek, Louise Hureau, Hedley Cairo, Stephen Vreden, Michael White, Maylis Douine

TL;DR
This study examines the spread of Plasmodium vivax malaria among gold miners in French Guiana, finding a decline in cases but ongoing risk from asymptomatic carriers.
Contribution
The study introduces a method combining biological tests and epidemiological data to identify asymptomatic Plasmodium vivax carriers in a mobile population.
Findings
Malaria cases imported from French Guiana decreased from 236 in 2014 to 74 in 2020.
P. vivax seropositivity was associated with male sex, age, gold mining duration, and recent malaria history.
Despite declining trends, moderate P. vivax circulation persisted among gold miners in 2020.
Abstract
The final challenge for malaria elimination in many countries is to interrupt the circulation of Plasmodium vivax. Given the unique biology of this parasite, innovative approaches are imperative, with a focus on identifying asymptomatic carriers of dormant parasite forms. This article delineates the recent epidemiological patterns of P. vivax malaria within a highly mobile and hard-to-reach population in the Guiana Shield. It further proposes an assessment of the potential reservoir of asymptomatic carriers. This analysis was based on data from: (i) two cross-sectional surveys carried out at the French-Surinamese border in 2015 and 2019, including adults returning from gold mining sites located in French Guiana (FG), [questionnaires and blood samples, tested for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and P. vivax serological exposure markers (SEM) of recent infection]; (ii) epidemiological…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMalaria Research and Control · Mosquito-borne diseases and control · Vector-borne infectious diseases
