Journal article

Anopheles salivary antigens as serological biomarkers of vector exposure and malaria transmission: A systematic review with multilevel modelling

EA Kearney, PA Agius, V Chaumeau, JC Cutts, JA Simpson, FJI Fowkes

Elife | eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD | Published : 2021

Abstract

Background: Entomological surveillance for malaria is inherently resource-intensive and produces crude population-level measures of vector exposure which are insensitive in low-transmission settings. Antibodies against Anopheles salivary proteins measured at the individual-level may serve as proxy biomarkers for vector exposure and malaria transmission, but their relationship is yet to be quantified. Methods: A systematic review of studies measuring antibodies against Anopheles salivary antigens (PROSPERO: CRD42020185449). Multilevel modelling (to account for multiple study-specific observations (level-one), nested within study (level-two), and study nested within country (levelthree)) estim..

View full abstract

Grants

Awarded by Wellcome Trust


Funding Acknowledgements

National Health and Medical Research Council 1134989 Julie A Simpson Freya JI Fowkesr National Health and Medical Research Council 1166753 Freya JI Fowkesr National Health and Medical Research Council 1196068 Julie A Simpson Australian Governmentr Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship Ellen A Kearneyr Wellcome Trust 220211 Victor Chaumeaur Victorian State Government Operational Infrastructure Support Program received by the Burnet Institute. Ellen A Kearney Paul A Agius Julia C Cutts Freya JI Fowkes