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Epidemiological Insights and Duffy Binding Protein Evolution of Plasmodium vivax in Duffy-Negative Cameroonians
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Epidemiological Insights and Duffy Binding Protein Evolution of Plasmodium vivax in Duffy-Negative Cameroonians

Cheikh Cambel Dieng, Rene Teh Ning, Canelle Kipayko, Regan Schroeder, Nontokozo Mdluli-Berndt, Bate Ayukenchengamba, Zidedine Nematchoua, Sona Doris, Ambendekson Elizabeth Reward, Irene Sumbele Ngole Ule, …
medRxiv
23 Jul 2025
PMID: 40778156
url
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/medrxiv/early/2025/05/29/2025.05.29.25328521.full.pdfView
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Abstract

Infectious Diseases Malaria
Malaria remains a major public health concern in sub-Saharan Africa, and P. vivax is emerging in regions with predominantly Duffy-negative populations. This study investigated P. vivax prevalence and genetic diversity across three ecological zones in Cameroon. P. vivax was detected in ∼11% of febrile patients and 5.5% of asymptomatic individuals, all are Duffy-negatives. Clinical infections exhibited higher parasitemia than infections detected in the communities. Standard PvLDH-based RDTs produced false-negative results, even at high parasitemia levels, whereas molecular tools like qPCR demonstrated superior sensitivity. Genetic analysis of PvDBP1 identified two prevalent mutations, I379L (73%) and E225K (61%), among samples, suggesting adaptive evolution. Phylogenetic analysis clustered Cameroonian isolates with those from Botswana but distinct from the Ethiopian and Sudanese isolates, indicating historical migration and local adaptation. The detection of asymptomatic P. vivax cases highlights the potential for transmission, reinforcing the need for enhanced surveillance in both community and clinical settings.

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