A Worldwide Map of Plasmodium falciparum K13-Propeller Polymorphisms.

Ménard D Khim N Beghain J Adegnika AA Shafiul-Alam M Amodu O Rahim-Awab G Barnadas C Berry A Boum Y Bustos MD Cao J Chen JH Collet L Cui L Thakur GD Dieye A Djallé D Dorkenoo MA Eboumbou-Moukoko CE Espino FE Fandeur T Ferreira-da-Cruz MF Fola AA Fuehrer HP Hassan AM Herrera S Hongvanthong B Houzé S Ibrahim ML Jahirul-Karim M Jiang L Kano S Ali-Khan W Khanthavong M Kremsner PG Lacerda M Leang R Leelawong M Li M Lin K Mazarati JB Ménard S Morlais I Muhindo-Mavoko H Musset L Na-Bangchang K Nambozi M Niaré K Noedl H Ouédraogo JB Pillai DR Pradines B Quang-Phuc B Ramharter M Randrianarivelojosia M Sattabongkot J Sheikh-Omar A Silué KD Sirima SB Sutherland C Syafruddin D Tahar R Tang LH Touré OA Tshibangu-wa-Tshibangu P Vigan-Womas I Warsame M Wini L Zakeri S Kim S Eam R Berne L Khean C Chy S Ken M Loch K Canier L Duru V Legrand E Barale JC Stokes B Straimer J Witkowski B Fidock DA Rogier C Ringwald P Ariey F Mercereau-Puijalon O
The New England journal of medicine 2016 06 23; 374(25); 2453-64. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1513137. Epub 2016 07 13

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recent gains in reducing the global burden of malaria are threatened by the emergence of Plasmodium falciparum resistance to artemisinins. The discovery that mutations in portions of a P. falciparum gene encoding kelch (K13)-propeller domains are the major determinant of resistance has provided opportunities for monitoring such resistance on a global scale.

METHODS: We analyzed the K13-propeller sequence polymorphism in 14,037 samples collected in 59 countries in which malaria is endemic. Most of the samples (84.5%) were obtained from patients who were treated at sentinel sites used for nationwide surveillance of antimalarial resistance. We evaluated the emergence and dissemination of mutations by haplotyping neighboring loci.

RESULTS: We identified 108 nonsynonymous K13 mutations, which showed marked geographic disparity in their frequency and distribution. In Asia, 36.5% of the K13 mutations were distributed within two areas--one in Cambodia, Vietnam, and Laos and the other in western Thailand, Myanmar, and China--with no overlap. In Africa, we observed a broad array of rare nonsynonymous mutations that were not associated with delayed parasite clearance. The gene-edited Dd2 transgenic line with the A578S mutation, which expresses the most frequently observed African allele, was found to be susceptible to artemisinin in vitro on a ring-stage survival assay.

CONCLUSIONS: No evidence of artemisinin resistance was found outside Southeast Asia and China, where resistance-associated K13 mutations were confined. The common African A578S allele was not associated with clinical or in vitro resistance to artemisinin, and many African mutations appear to be neutral. (Funded by Institut Pasteur Paris and others.).