Maternal Malaria Exposure & โPreterm Birth Increase Infant Malaria Risk: A New Study
A recent study published in JAMA Network Open in September โฃ2025 has revealedโข a โขsignificant link between maternal plasmodium falciparum (PM) infection during pregnancy and โฃincreased susceptibility toโข malaria in offspring,โ notably inโค early childhood. The research also suggests aโข parity-dependent โassociation betweenโข preterm birth (PTD)โฃ andโข malaria risk.
The study, conducted betweenโฃ 2014 and 2019, followed โฃ1687โฃ mother-childโ dyads.Participants were women delivering their first, โsecond,โค or subsequent children whoโ did not have chronic or debilitating disease โat enrollment. Researchers collected blood samples from mothers to screen for malaria and โฃused โฃtransonographic examinations to determine gestational age. Children were followed for up to five years, with monitoring frequency varying basedโ on malariaโข transmission season – monthly during transmission andโข bi-monthly during dry seasons.
Researchers diagnosed malaria in children through clinical examination and blood smear microscopy, with confirmation via nested โpolymerase chain reaction analysis for maternal โinfections.Severe malaria was defined as parasite detection alongside symptoms including coma, two or more convulsions within 24 hours, prostration, โคhemoglobin levels below 6 mg/dL, or respiratoryโฃ distress. PTD was defined as viable โขbirthโข before 37โ weeks of gestation.
The study โขfound that 66.9%โ of mothers experienced malaria infection during pregnancy, and 5.7% experienced PTD. A considerable proportion, 45.3%, of offspring were born during โฃthe malaria transmission season. By age one, 46% of children had been infected with P. falciparum, rising to 83%โค by age three.
Crucially, children born to โคmothers who tested positive for PM experienced infection substantially โคearlier. The โฃmedian time to โfirst infection โwas 49.9 weeks for offspring of PM-positive mothers, compared to 80.9 weeks for those born toโ PM-negativeโ mothers. The risk of a child’s first P. falciparum infection was 1.56 times higher in those โwhose mothers had been infected.This increasedโฃ risk persisted across all gravidity levels (first, second, andโค subsequent pregnancies).
Specifically, offspring of primigravid โข(firstโ pregnancy) womenโค with PM-positive mothers had anโ adjustedโฃ hazard ratio โ(aHR) of 1.86โ for firstโ malaria infection. Offspring of secundigravid (second pregnancy) and multigravida (subsequentโฃ pregnancies) women with PM-positive mothers showed increased risks with โคaHRs of 1.40 and 1.54, โฃrespectively.
While PTD was linked to a 1.12-fold increasedโ risk of infection compared to full-termโ births, thisโ association wasn’t โฃstatistically significant overall. Though, a significant increase in risk wasโฃ observed in offspring of uninfected multigravid women who were born preterm, with a 1.76-fold increased riskโฃ compared โคto full-term births.
The study concludes that maternal malaria infection โฃincreases a child’s susceptibility to malaria in early life.the researchers noted โthat the relationship between PTD and susceptibility appears โto be specifically relevant in offspring of uninfectedโ multigravid women. โฃ
“The parity-dependent response to PTD remainsโ to โคbe furtherโฃ explored โคin a larger study sample withโ monitoringโฃ for immune cell โคprofiles,” the investigators wrote. (Barry A, et al., 2025).