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Ultra-sensitive PCR on residual DBS shows 7.7% P. falciparum prevalence in Rwandan adults.

Ultra-sensitive PCR on residual DBS shows 7.7% P. falciparum prevalence in Rwandan adults.
Photo by Ayanda Kunene / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Consider molecular surveillance of residual DBS to assess P. falciparum trends in resource-limited settings.

This study utilized ultra-sensitive quantitative real-time PCR to analyze residual dried blood spots (DBS) originally collected for HIV testing in the 2019-20 Rwandan Demographic and Health Surveys. The population consisted of 7,127 adults across national and province-level settings. This approach contrasts with previous surveys that were limited to subsets of women and children tested via rapid diagnostic tests or microscopy.

The primary outcome assessed national P. falciparum infection prevalence, which was 7.7% (95%CI [6.8%, 8.7%]). This figure reflects a relative decrease of 53% compared to the 2014-15 RDHS study. Median parasitemia was reported as 7.3 parasites/uL, though specific statistical measures for this metric were not provided.

Significant predictors of infection included male sex, lower household wealth, lower educational achievement, and residence at lower elevation. These associations were identified as covariates rather than causal factors. Safety data, adverse events, and tolerability were not reported as the study involved analysis of residual samples.

Key limitations include the observational nature of the data, which precludes causal inference regarding the predictors identified. The study demonstrates the utility of molecular surveillance using existing biospecimens. While the results indicate a substantial reduction in malaria burden, clinicians should interpret these findings within the context of rising antimalarial parasite prevalence and potential ART-associated mutations reported in the region.

Study Details

EvidenceLevel 5
PublishedApr 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Rwanda is a malaria endemic country and a focal point for emerging Plasmodium falciparum artemisinin partial resistance (ART-R). While Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) provide both national and province-level representative data, malaria testing in Rwandan DHS (RDHS) studies has been limited to a subset of adult women and children under 5 years using RDT and/or microscopy. Recent work using ultra-sensitive quantitative real time PCR on residual dried blood spots (DBS) from the 2014-15 RDHS revealed a significantly higher P. falciparum prevalence than detected by standard DHS diagnostics. Building on this study, we analyzed 7,127 adult DBS samples collected for HIV testing in the 2019-20 RDHS to generate updated prevalence measures. We found a national P. falciparum infection prevalence of 7.7% (95%CI [6.8%, 8.7%]), with predominantly low-density infections (median parasitemia: 7.3 parasites/uL). We assessed covariates of P. falciparum malaria infection, identifying male sex, lower household wealth, lower educational achievement, and residence at lower elevation as significant predictors. Notably, national P. falciparum prevalence decreased 53% relative to the parallel 2014-15 RDHS study, despite reports of increasing ART-R-associated mutations in Rwanda. These findings demonstrate the utility of ultra-sensitive molecular surveillance, and suggest that national malaria control efforts have substantially reduced malaria burden in Rwanda even amid rising antimalarial parasite prevalence. Subsequent studies on this data set will provide measures of minor Plasmodium species prevalence, as well as temporospatial analysis of antimalarial resistance markers in P. falciparum positive samples.
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