Table 1 Comparison of Plasmodium falciparum temporal patterns estimated from pregnant women at first antenatal care visit and clinical cases in children

From: Detecting temporal and spatial malaria patterns from first antenatal care visits

Test

Population

χ2

Pearson CC (95%CI)

Time lag (days)

qPCR

 

All prenatal

1

0.87 (0.69, 0.91)

89

 

Primigravidae

0.97

0.69 (0.31, 0.81)

81

 

Multigravidae

0.97

0.90 (0.66, 0.92)

89

 

HIV-infected

0.56

0.80 (0.26, 0.86)

127

 

HIV-uninfected

0.83

0.87 (0.64, 0.92)

89

 

Primigravid HIV-

0.94

0.72 (0.24, 0.80)

37

RDT

 

All prenatal

1.49

0.78 (0.27, 0.85)

39

 

Primigravidae

1.23

0.66 (0.14, 0.78)

91

 

Multigravidae

0.78

0.82 (0.24, 0.87)

33

 

HIV-infected

0.34

0.79 (0.06, 0.84)

43

 

HIV-uninfected

1.14

0.71 (0.24, 0.81)

39

 

Primigravid HIV-

1.06

0.66 (0.13, 0.80)

37

  1. Pearson correlation coefficients and χ2 statistics of the comparison between the temporal trends in PfPRqPCR (first six rows) and PfPRRDT (last six rows) in different populations of pregnant women at first ANC visit and the mean weekly number of clinical cases, with their time lag of optimal correlation. A time lag of 89 days indicates that the results of the clinical cases in children had the best correlation with the results of pregnant women taken 89 days after the clinical cases in children.