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Epidemiology of malaria in the forest-savanna transitional zone of Ghana

Seth Owusu-Agyei1,2 email, Kwaku Poku Asante1 email, Martin Adjuik3 email, George Adjei1 email, Elizabeth Awini4 email, Mohammed Adams1 email, Sam Newton1 email, David Dosoo1 email, Dominic Dery1 email, Akua Agyeman-Budu1 email, John Gyapong5 email, Brian Greenwood2 email and Daniel Chandramohan2 email

Kintampo Health Research Centre, Kintampo, Ghana

DCVB/ITD, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UK

Navrongo Health Research Centre, Navrongo, Ghana

Dodowa Health Research Centre, Dodowa, Ghana

Health Research Unit, Ghana Health Service, Ghana

author email corresponding author email

Malaria Journal 2009, 8:220doi:10.1186/1475-2875-8-220

Published: 28 September 2009

Abstract

Background

Information on the epidemiology of malaria is essential for designing and interpreting results of clinical trials of drugs, vaccines and other interventions. As a background to the establishment of a site for anti-malarial drugs and vaccine trials, the epidemiology of malaria in a rural site in central Ghana was investigated.

Methods

Active surveillance of clinical malaria was carried out in a cohort of children below five years of age (n = 335) and the prevalence of malaria was estimated in a cohort of subjects of all ages (n = 1484) over a 12-month period. Participants were sampled from clusters drawn around sixteen index houses randomly selected from a total of about 22,000 houses within the study area. The child cohort was visited thrice weekly to screen for any illness and a blood slide was taken if a child had a history of fever or a temperature greater than or equal to 37.5 degree Celsius. The all-age cohort was screened for malaria once every eight weeks over a 12-month period. Estimation of Entomological Inoculation Rate (EIR) and characterization of Anopheline malaria vectors in the study area were also carried out.

Results

The average parasite prevalence in the all age cohort was 58% (95% CI: 56.9, 59.4). In children below five years of age, the average prevalence was 64% (95% CI: 61.9, 66.0). Geometric mean parasite densities decreased significantly with increasing age. More than 50% of all children less than 10 years of age were anaemic. Children less than 5 years of age had as many as seven malaria attacks per child per year. The attack rates decreased significantly with increasing cut-offs of parasite density. The average Multiplicity of Infection (MOI) was of 6.1. All three pyrimethamine resistance mutant alleles of the Plasmodium falciparum dhfr gene were prevalent in this population and 25% of infections had a fourth mutant of pfdhps-A437G. The main vectors were Anopheles funestus and Anopheles gambiae and the EIR was 269 infective bites per person per year.

Conclusion

The transmission of malaria in the forest-savanna region of central Ghana is high and perennial and this is an appropriate site for conducting clinical trials of anti-malarial drugs and vaccines.


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