Fabiana P. Alves
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Fabiana P. Alves.
Journal of Medical Entomology | 2005
Fabiana P. Alves; Luiz Herman Soares Gil; Mauro Toledo Marrelli; Paulo Eduardo Martins Ribolla; Erney P. Camargo; Luiz Hildebrando Pereira da Silva
Abstract We have described the existence of asymptomatic carriers of Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum infections in native Amazon populations. Most of them had low parasitemias, detected only by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Because they remain symptomless and untreated, we wanted to determine whether they could infect Anopheles darlingi Root, the main Brazilian vector, and act as disease reservoirs. Fifteen adult asymptomatic patients (PCR positive only) were selected, and experimental infections of mosquitoes were performed by direct feeding and by a membrane-feeding system. Seventeen adult symptomatic patients with high parasitemias were used as controls. We found an infection rate in An. darlingi of 1.2% for the asymptomatic carriers and 22% for the symptomatic carriers. Although the asymptomatic group infected mosquitoes at a much lower rate, these patients remain infective longer than treated, symptomatic patients. Also, the prevalence of asymptomatic infections is 4 to 5 times higher than symptomatic infections among natives. These results have implications for the malaria control program in Brazil, which focuses essentially on the treatment of symptomatic patients.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2008
Fabiana M. S. Leoratti; Lilian Farias; Fabiana P. Alves; Martha Cecilia Suárez-Mutis; José Rodrigues Coura; Jorge Kalil; Erney P. Camargo; Sandra do Lago Moraes; Rajendranath Ramasawmy
BACKGROUND Malaria is one of the most significant infectious diseases in the world and is responsible for a large proportion of infant deaths. Toll-like receptors (TLRs), key components of innate immunity, are central to countering infection. Variants in the TLR-signaling pathway are associated with susceptibility to infectious diseases. METHODS We genotyped single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of the genes associated with the TLR-signaling pathway in patients with mild malaria and individuals with asymptomatic Plasmodium infections by means of polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS Genotype distributions for the TLR-1 I602S differed significantly between patients with mild malaria and persons with asymptomatic infection. The TLR-1 602S allele was associated with an odds ratio (OR) of 2.2 (P= .003; P(corrected)= .015) for malaria among patients with mild malaria due to any Plasmodium species and 2.1 (P= .015; P(corrected)= .75) among patients with mild malaria due to Plasmodium falciparum only. The TLR-6 S249P SNP showed an excess of homozygotes for the TLR-6 249P allele in asymptomatic persons, compared with patients with mild malaria due to any Plasmodium species (OR 2.1; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.1- 4.2; P= .01; P(corrected)= .05), suggesting that the TLR-6 249S allele may be a risk factor for malaria (OR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.1-3.7; P=0.01; P(corrected)= .05). The TLR-9 -1486C allele showed a strong association with high parasitemia (P< .001). CONCLUSIONS Our findings indicate that the TLR-1 and TLR-6 variants are significantly associated with mild malaria, whereas the TLR-9-1486C/T variants are associated with high parasitemia. These discoveries may bring additional understanding to the pathogenesis of malaria.
Journal of Medical Entomology | 2003
Luís H. Soares Gil; Fabiana P. Alves; Helge Zieler; Juan Miguel Villalobos Salcedo; Rui R. Durlacher; Roberto Penna de Almeida Cunha; Mauro Shugiro Tada; Luiz Marcelo Aranha Camargo; Erney P. Camargo; Luiz Hildebrando Pereira-da-Silva
Abstract Studies on seasonal anopheline fauna variation were performed in two distinct settlements in the State of Rondônia, Brazil: one at the Madeira River banks (Portuchuelo) with stable native Amazonian population; the other at an inland lumber-extracting farm (Urupá) in dry land, in which adults are mostly migrants. During a 6-yr period (1994–2000), 8,638 adult anophelines were collected: 2,684 in Urupá and 5,954 in Portuchuelo. Anopheles darlingi represented >95% of total mosquitoes caught. Dissection of 4,424 A. darlingi females yielded a very low sporozoite infection index below 0.1%. Oocysts were found in both localities in ∼0.1% of dissected mosquitoes. Determination of the hour biting rates disclosed seasonal variations in both localities. However, in Portuchuelo, mosquito density peaked at the acme of the rainy season, whereas at Urupá it peaked in the dry season. The increase in mosquito density and incidence of malaria cases were coincident. The high mosquito densities observed in the riverine settlement of Portochuelo sector B, which permits evaluation in >10,000 mosquitoes’ bites/person/year, could explain, in spite of the low mosquito’s infection index, the previously described development of natural immunity in the local population that is not observed in the dry land agroindustrial settlement of Urupá.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1997
Filomena E. C. de Alencar; Crispim Cerutti; Rui Rafael Durlacher; Marcos Boulos; Fabiana P. Alves; Wilbur K. Milhous; Lorrin W. Pang
The purpose of this study was to compare an experimental regimen of atovaquone plus proguanil with the standard regimen of quinine plus tetracycline for the treatment of uncomplicated falciparum malaria. The study was designed as an open, randomized study of men presenting with symptoms of uncomplicated malaria and thick-smear slide confirmation of parasitemia (1000-100,000 ring forms/microL). Subjects were hospitalized for 28 days to insure medication compliance and to rule out the possibility of reinfections. With 77 patients in each group, the cure rates were 98.7% and 100% for atovaquone plus proguanil and quinine plus tetracycline, respectively. The parasite clearance times (mean, 56 h) and fever clearance times (mean, 19 h) were significantly shorter in the atovaquone plus proguanil group, and there were significantly fewer side effects in the atovaquone plus proguanil group. Atovaquone plus proguanil is an efficacious, easily administered, safe regimen for the treatment of uncomplicated, multidrug-resistant falciparum malaria in Brazil.
The Lancet | 1999
Erney P. Camargo; Fabiana P. Alves; Luiz Hildebrando Pereira da Silva
Naturally acquired immunity to falciparum malaria has been recorded in holoendemic and hyperendemic Africa. , 2 Similar records do not exist for vivax malaria. Although individuals repeatedly infected with Plasmodium vivax m a y have attenuated symptoms, absence of symptoms has never been described in endemic areas of vivax malaria. , 3 W e provide evidence of symptomless vivax malaria in a riverine Amazonian population in the state of Rondonia, Brazil. Colonisers who came from malaria-free southern Brazil between 1960 and 1980 and their immediate descendants constitute more than 95% of the Rondonian population of 1 2 00 000 inhabitants. When those migrants arrived, they encountered a small native population that had been living for generations in settlements scattered along rivers. From the 1960s onwards, malaria spread to immigrants. It was often severe but remained endemic and less severe in the native people. The presence of blood parasites, either P falciparum or P vivax, was always accompanied by symptoms in migrants. In the riverine population a few people had blood parasites in absence of symptoms. W e considered that some of the native population might be immune to malaria and also serve as reservoirs of the d i s e a s e . To test this hypothesis we studied a native population, adding PCR-amplification of ribosomal DNA to clinical examination and blood-smear microscopy for the diagnosis of vivax malaria. After giving informed consent, 183 inhabitants (92% of a village population) were followed up from September, 1998. 14 cases of vivax malaria were diagnosed up to January, 1999. All cases had malaria symptoms with positive blood smears and positive PCR. The majority of the patients (82%) had lived for more than 1 year in the village and were less than 16 years old. We also detected 25 individuals (68% of them older than 16 years) who were PCR-positive for P vivax, but without symptoms. 16 were put under medical supervision for 30 days. Eight had positive blood smears with very low
Infection and Immunity | 2006
Paulo Afonso Nogueira; Fabiana P. Alves; Carmen Fernandez-Becerra; Oliver Pein; Neida Rodrigues Santos; Luiz Hildebrando Pereira da Silva; Erney Plessman Camargo; Hernando A. del Portillo
ABSTRACT Progress towards the development of a malaria vaccine against Plasmodium vivax, the most widely distributed human malaria parasite, will require a better understanding of the immune responses that confer clinical protection to patients in regions where malaria is endemic. The occurrence of clinical protection in P. vivax malaria in Brazil was first reported among residents of the riverine community of Portuchuelo, in Rondônia, western Amazon. We thus analyzed immune sera from this same human population to determine if naturally acquired humoral immune responses against the merozoite surface protein 1 of P. vivax, PvMSP1, could be associated with reduced risk of infection and/or clinical protection. Our results demonstrated that this association could be established with anti-PvMSP1 antibodies predominantly of the immunoglobulin G3 subclass directed against the N terminus but not against the C terminus, in spite of the latter being more immunogenic and capable of natural boosting. This is the first report of a prospective study of P. vivax malaria demonstrating an association of reduced risk of infection and clinical protection with antibodies against an antigen of this parasite.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2001
Patrícia Puccinelli Orlandi; Tatiane Silva; Gleiciene Félix Magalhães; Fabiana P. Alves; Roberto Penna de Almeida Cunha; Rui Rafael Durlacher; Luiz Hildebrando Pereira da Silva
One hundred and thirty cases of diarrhea and 43 age-matched controls, 0 to 5 years old, were studied in a pediatric outpatient unit from a poor peri urban area of Porto Velho, Rondônia. Eighty percent of diarrheal cases were observed in the groups under 2 years of age. Rotavirus (19.2%) was the most frequent enteropathogen associated with diarrhea, followed by Shigella flexneri (6.15%) and S. sonnei (1.5%) and Salmonella sp. (6.9%). Four cases of E. coli enterotoxigenic infections (3.1%), E. coli enteropathogenic (EPEC)(2.3%) one case of E. coli enteroinvasive infection (0.8%) and one case of Yersinia enterocolitica (0.8%) were also identified. Mixed infections were frequent, associating rotavirus, EPEC and Salmonella sp. with Entamoeba histolytica and Giardia lamblia.
Malaria Journal | 2010
Carmen Fernandez-Becerra; Sergi Sanz; Marina Brucet; Danielle I. Stanisic; Fabiana P. Alves; Erney P. Camargo; Pedro L. Alonso; Ivo Mueller; Hernando A. del Portillo
BackgroundProgress towards the development of a malaria vaccine against Plasmodium vivax, the most widely distributed human malaria parasite, will require a better understanding of the immune responses that confer clinical protection to patients in regions where malaria is endemic.MethodsGlutathione S-transferase (GST) and GST-fusion proteins representing the N- terminus of the merozoite surface protein 1 of P. vivax, PvMSP1-N, and the C-terminus, PvMSP1-C, were covalently coupled to BioPlex carboxylated beads. Recombinant proteins and coupled beads were used, respectively, in ELISA and Bioplex assays using immune sera of P. vivax patients from Brazil and PNG to determine IgG and subclass responses. Concordances between the two methods in the seropositivity responses were evaluated using the Kappa statistic and the Spearmans rank correlation.ResultsThe results using this methodology were compared with the classical microtitre enzyme-linked immnosorbent assay (ELISA), showing that the assay was sensitive, reproducible and had good concordance with ELISA; yet, further research into different statistical analyses seems desirable before claiming conclusive results exclusively based on multiplex assays. As expected, results demonstrated that PvMSP1 was immunogenic in natural infections of patients from different endemic regions of Brazil and Papua New Guinea (PNG), and that age correlated only with antibodies against the C-terminus part of the molecule. Furthermore, the IgG subclass profiles were different in these endemic regions having IgG3 predominantly recognizing PvMSP1 in Brazil and IgG1 predominantly recognizing PvMSP1 in PNG.ConclusionsThis study validates the use of the multiplex assay to measure naturally-acquired IgG antibodies against the merozoite surface protein 1 of P. vivax.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2005
Gerhard Wunderlich; Fabiana P. Alves; Uta Gölnitz; Mauro Shugiro Tada; Erney P. Camargo; Luiz Hildebrando Pereira-da-Silva
The var genes of Plasmodium falciparum code for the antigenically variant erythrocyte membrane proteins 1 (PfEMP1), a major factor for cytoadherence and immune escape of the parasite. Herein, we analyzed the var gene transcript turnover in two ongoing, non-symptomatic infections at sequential time points during two weeks. The number of different circulating genomes was estimated by microsatellite analyses. In both infections, we observed a rapid turnover of plasmodial genotypes and var transcripts. The rapidly changing repertoire of var transcripts could have been caused either by swift elimination of circulating var-transcribing parasites stemming from different or identical genetic backgrounds, or by accelerated switching of var gene transcription itself.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2002
Fabiana P. Alves; Rui R. Durlacher; Maria J. Menezes; Henrique Krieger; Luiz Hildebrando Pereira da Silva; Erney P. Camargo