Evidence of Submicroscopic Malaria Parasitemia, Soil-Transmitted Helminths, and Their Coinfections Among Forest-Fringed Orang Asli Communities in Peninsular Malaysia

Nurmanisha, Abdull Majid and Yap, Nan Jiun and Tee, Mian Zi and Er, Yi Xian and Romano, Ngui and Yvonne Lim, Ai Lian (2025) Evidence of Submicroscopic Malaria Parasitemia, Soil-Transmitted Helminths, and Their Coinfections Among Forest-Fringed Orang Asli Communities in Peninsular Malaysia. The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. pp. 1-9. ISSN 1476-1645

[img] PDF
Abdull-Majid et al 2025_STH Malaria_AJTMH.pdf

Download (903kB)
Official URL: https://www.ajtmh.org/view/journals/tpmd/aop/artic...

Abstract

Malaysia’s malaria rate has declined but remains a public health concern, with limited investigations into malaria and coinfections with soil-transmitted helminth (STH) infections. A cross-sectional study using convenience sampling in Orang Asli villages enrolled 437 villagers aged 1–83 years based on their willingness to participate. Blood samples were tested microscopically for malaria, followed by nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and stool samples were screened microscopically for STH eggs. Body temperature, demographic, and socioeconomic data were collected. Malaria parasite was detectable only via PCR, with a 15.3% prevalence, indicating submicroscopic malaria parasitemia; none of the positive cases presented fever. The identified species included Plasmodium vivax (8.7%), Plasmodium cynomolgi (5.5%), Plasmodium knowlesi (4.3%), Plasmodium falciparum (1.8%), Plasmodium inui (0.2%), and Plasmodium malariae (0.2%). Females had significantly higher rates of submicroscopic malaria parasitemia (19.6%) compared with males (9.3%, P = 0.003). STH infections were highly prevalent (71.4%), with Trichuris trichiura (65.2%), Ascaris lumbricoides (35.0%), and hookworm (14.6%). STH infection was associated with age (P <0.001), peaking in individuals aged 10–19 years (86.2%) and 1–9 years (83.0%), as well as with students (84.3% versus 60.8% in employed and 60.3% in unemployed; P <0.001) and low-income households (76.4% versus 61.7% in higher-income households; P = 0.002). Submicroscopic malaria parasitemia and STH coinfections were present in 8.9% of participants, with higher rates in low-income households (12.6% versus 5.2% in higher-income, P = 0.010). The Negrito tribe exhibited the highest prevalence of submicroscopic malaria parasitemia, STH, and coinfections (P <0.05). This study highlights the need for integrated malaria and STH control strategies, particularly for the Negrito tribe.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: soil-transmitted helminth (STH) infections, polymerase chain reaction (PCR), submicroscopic malaria parasitemia.
Subjects: Q Science > QR Microbiology
R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
Divisions: Academic Faculties, Institutes and Centres > Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Faculties, Institutes, Centres > Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Depositing User: Ngui
Date Deposited: 17 Apr 2025 01:54
Last Modified: 17 Apr 2025 01:54
URI: http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47985

Actions (For repository members only: login required)

View Item View Item