Origin and Dissemination of Plasmodium falciparum Drug-Resistance Mutations in South America

JF Cortese, A Caraballo, CE Contreras… - The Journal of …, 2002 - academic.oup.com
JF Cortese, A Caraballo, CE Contreras, CV Plowe
The Journal of infectious diseases, 2002academic.oup.com
Multidrug resistance is a major obstacle to the control of Plasmodium falciparum malaria,
and its origins and modes of dissemination are imperfectly understood. In this study,
haplotyping and microsatellite analysis of malaria from 5 regions of the South American
Amazon support the conclusion that the parasite mutations conferring mid-and high-level
resistance to the antifolate combination sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine have a common origin.
Parasites harboring these mutations are also found to share drug-resistance alleles that …
Abstract
Multidrug resistance is a major obstacle to the control of Plasmodium falciparum malaria, and its origins and modes of dissemination are imperfectly understood. In this study, haplotyping and microsatellite analysis of malaria from 5 regions of the South American Amazon support the conclusion that the parasite mutations conferring mid- and high-level resistance to the antifolate combination sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine have a common origin. Parasites harboring these mutations are also found to share drug-resistance alleles that confer a unique chloroquine resistance phenotype and to be similar at loci not linked to drug resistance, although not genetically identical. Since the 1980s, multidrug-resistant P. falciparum has spread in a north-northwest manner across the continent, from an origin likely in the lower Amazon. This study highlights the importance of continent-wide malaria-control policies and suggests that the containment of resistance to the next generation of therapies may be feasible
Oxford University Press