Emerging Infectious Diseases (Oct 2022)

Plasmodium falciparum pfhrp2 and pfhrp3 Gene Deletions and Relatedness to Other Global Isolates, Djibouti, 2019–2020

  • Eric Rogier,
  • Jessica N. McCaffery,
  • Mohamed Ali Mohamed,
  • Camelia Herman,
  • Doug Nace,
  • Rachel Daniels,
  • Naomi Lucchi,
  • Sophie Jones,
  • Ira Goldman,
  • Michael Aidoo,
  • Qin Cheng,
  • Edie A. Kemenang,
  • Venkatachalam Udhayakumar,
  • Jane Cunningham

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2810.220695
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 10
pp. 2043 – 2050

Abstract

Read online

Deletions of pfhrp2 and paralogue pfhrp3 (pfhrp2/3) genes threaten Plasmodium falciparum diagnosis by rapid diagnostic test. We examined 1,002 samples from suspected malaria patients in Djibouti City, Djibouti, to investigate pfhrp2/3 deletions. We performed assays for Plasmodium antigen carriage, pfhrp2/3 genotyping, and sequencing for 7 neutral microsatellites to assess relatedness. By PCR assay, 311 (31.0%) samples tested positive for P. falciparum infection, and 296 (95.2%) were successfully genotyped; 37 (12.5%) samples were pfhrp2+/pfhrp3+, 51 (17.2%) were pfhrp2+/pfhrp3–, 5 (1.7%) were pfhrp2–/pfhrp3+, and 203 (68.6%) were pfhrp2–/pfhrp3–. Histidine-rich protein 2/3 antigen concentrations were reduced with corresponding gene deletions. Djibouti P. falciparum is closely related to Ethiopia and Eritrea parasites (pairwise GST 0.68 [Ethiopia] and 0.77 [Eritrea]). P. falciparum with deletions in pfhrp2/3 genes were highly prevalent in Djibouti City in 2019–2020; they appear to have arisen de novo within the Horn of Africa and have not been imported.

Keywords