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Beyond Blood Smears: Qualification of Plasmodium 18S rRNA as a Biomarker for Controlled Human Malaria Infections

Authors :
Seilie, Annette M.
Chang, Ming
Hanron, Amelia E.
Billman, Zachary P.
Stone, Brad C.
Zhou, Kevin
Olsen, Tayla M.
Daza, Glenda
Ortega, Jose
Cruz, Kurtis R.
Smith, Nahum
Healy, Sara A.
Neal, Jillian
Wallis, Carolyn K.
Shelton, Lisa
Mankowski, Tracie (VonGoedert)
Wong-Madden, Sharon
Mikolajczak, Sebastian A.
Vaughan, Ashley M.
Kappe, Stefan H. I.
Fishbaugher, Matt
Betz, Will
Kennedy, Mark
Hume, Jen C. C.
Talley, Angela K.
Hoffman, Stephen L.
Chakravarty, Sumana
Sim, B. Kim Lee
Richie, Thomas L.
Wald, Anna
Plowe, Christopher V.
Lyke, Kirsten E.
Adams, Matthew
Fahle, Gary A.
Cowan, Elliot P.
Duffy, Patrick E.
Kublin, James G.
Murphy, Sean C.
Source :
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2019.

Abstract

18S rRNA is a biomarker that provides an alternative to thick blood smears in controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) trials. We reviewed data from CHMI trials at non-endemic sites that used blood smears and Plasmodium 18S rRNA/rDNA biomarker nucleic acid tests (NATs) for time to positivity. We validated a multiplex quantitative reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) for Plasmodium 18S rRNA, prospectively compared blood smears and qRT-PCR for three trials, and modeled treatment effects at different biomarker-defined parasite densities to assess the impact on infection detection, symptom reduction, and measured intervention efficacy. Literature review demonstrated accelerated NAT-based infection detection compared with blood smears (mean acceleration: 3.2–3.6 days). For prospectively tested trials, the validated Plasmodium 18S rRNA qRT-PCR positivity was earlier (7.6 days; 95% CI: 7.1–8.1 days) than blood smears (11.0 days; 95% CI: 10.3–11.8 days) and significantly preceded the onset of grade 2 malaria-related symptoms (12.2 days; 95% CI: 10.6–13.3 days). Discrepant analysis showed that the risk of a blood smear–positive, biomarker-negative result was negligible. Data modeling predicted that treatment triggered by specific biomarker-defined thresholds can differentiate complete, partial, and non-protective outcomes and eliminate many grade 2 and most grade 3 malaria-related symptoms post-CHMI. Plasmodium 18S rRNA is a sensitive and specific biomarker that can justifiably replace blood smears for infection detection in CHMI trials in non-endemic settings. This study led to biomarker qualification through the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for use in CHMI studies at non-endemic sites, which will facilitate biomarker use for the qualified context of use in drug and vaccine trials.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14761645 and 00029637
Volume :
100
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........5c6ab1ac54a324f5f900e6ad56ede3bc