From: Historical trends and new surveillance of Plasmodium falciparum drug resistance markers in Angola
Year | 86Y | 184F | Province | Recruitment | Notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | 73.3% | – | Luanda (+ São Tomé) | Travellers returning to Portugal | Year approximate; mixed infections reported as dominant allele | [60] |
2004 | 51.7% | – | Uíge | Children 4–108 months in hospital emergency unit | - | [36] |
2007 | 64.8% | – | Luanda | Children 1–16 years with uncomplicated malaria in hospital | Year approximate | [54] |
2007 | 65.5% | 17.9% | Luanda | Adults > 18 years with uncomplicated malaria | Frequent failures to amplify mdr1 | [30] |
2010 | 27.8% | 34.8% | Bengo | Baseline prevalence survey in women and children | - | [55] |
2010–2011 | 53.7% | 14.8% | Benguela | Random household survey of children < 15 years | Mixed infections not mentioned | [56] |
2010–2013 | 24.5% | – | Luanda | Adults and children > 6 months with uncomplicated malaria in health care units | - | [62] |
2012–2016 | 14.4% | – | – | Migrant workers returning to China | Mixed infections not mentioned | [59] |
2015 | 15.3% | 31.5% | Benguela, Lunda Sul, Zaire | Children 6–108 months with uncomplicated malaria | Mixed infections reported as mutant | [62] |
2018 | 6.5% | 44.0% | Cabinda | Adults and children in hospital | - | This study |