Challenging diagnosis of congenital malaria in non-endemic areas.
Lorenza RomaniStefania PaneCarlo SeveriniMichela MenegonGianluca FogliettaStefania BernardiHyppolite K TchidjouAndrea Onetti MudaPaolo PalmaLorenza PutignaniPublished in: Malaria journal (2018)
The maternal RDT sample was negative, while the infant RDT was positive; in both cases microscopy of blood smears and PCR showed infection with P. falciparum. Two of the genotypic molecular markers displayed different allelic variants between the two samples. This difference could imply infection multiplicity of the mother during the pregnancy, possibly harbouring more than one isolate, only one of them being transmitted to the newborn while the other persisting in the mother's blood. Because of the increasing number of pregnant women coming from endemic areas for malaria, an accurate anamnesis of infant's mother, and the inclusion of Plasmodium spp. research into TORCH screenings for mother-infant pair at birth, aiming at reducing morbidity and mortality associated to the disease might be suitable.