The Prince George Citizen

How dogs could eradicate malaria

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Steven Lindsay, a public health entomologi­st at Durham University in England, has been researchin­g malaria control for decades. His preferred approach, he says, is to “sit on the boundaries,” drumming up ideas that others might not. So it’s perhaps unsurprisi­ng that his latest project was inspired by the baggage-claim area at Dulles Internatio­nal Airport. If the beagles there could use their noses to detect explosives or contraband in suitcases, he wondered, could they also be trained to sniff out an intractabl­e disease that kills more than 400,000 people each year?

Lindsay ended up tackling that question in a project that involved the dirty socks of hundreds of African children and a trio of sniffer dogs in England – and the answer strongly pointed to yes. The dogs correctly identified socks worn by malaria-infected children 70 per cent of the time and those worn by noninfecte­d children 90 per cent of the time.

“I think it is quite extraordin­ary,” said Lindsay, the lead scientist on a study being presented Monday at the annual meeting of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. “We put these socks on African children for 12 hours, take them off, freeze them for 15 months before we start training and then the dogs can pick up that odour.”

Funding for the project came from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which put out a call for research on malaria tests that are noninvasiv­e, unlike current tests that rely on blood samples. Lindsay and his colleagues focused on asymptomat­ic carriers because they play a key role in malaria’s persistenc­e, acting as hidden reservoirs. But finding them is a challenge because current methods make mass testing impractica­l.

Lindsay and his colleagues gave nylon socks to nearly 600 children who had been tested for malaria in Gambia, where the disease is endemic, and asked them to wear them overnight. Researcher­s ended up with 30 socks from asymptomat­ic malaria carriers and 145 socks from children who tested negative for the disease. Those were then wrapped in foil, frozen and sent to England, where they were stored at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine while a charity called Medical Detection Dogs trained the pooches.

That malaria alters the volatile compounds that make up a person’s odor has been establishe­d, and previous research has found that the mosquitoes that spread the disease are more attracted to carriers, including asymptomat­ic ones.

“If a mosquito can do it,” Lindsay said, “why not a dog?”

Dogs, after all, have proved adept at sniffing out cancer, narcotics, human remains and even orca feces. Just what they’re smelling when they detect disease isn’t clear, said Jennifer Essler, a postdoctor­al fellow who works with dogs that sniff for ovarian cancer at the Penn Vet Working Dog Center.

“What we present them with is the blood plasma,” Essler said, referring to her own research. “Does that mean they’re detecting the body’s response to the cancer? Is there something from the cancer in the blood? We’re not really sure.”

Essler’s team is working with scientists from the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelph­ia to find out what ovariancan­cer-detection dogs smell. That’s because the end goal, she said, is not to have dogs screen patients, but to take what’s learned from the dogs to create an “electronic nose” that could screen for ovarian cancer.

“For many reasons, you can’t deploy dogs to a lot of places,” she said. Too, “they’re still beings. There are still days when they come in and have a bad day.”

But the malaria research provides another strong example of dogs’ potential, Essler said: “It’s awesome that people are recognizin­g the capabiliti­es of dogs and how they can be used to help people.”

When it comes to malaria, Lindsay said he does not envision squadrons of canines patrolling villages in sub-Saharan Africa. Malaria-detecting electronic noses are also one possible outcome of further research, he said.

But in the shorter term, malaria-detection dogs might work at ports of entry in countries that have eliminated the disease and want to keep it out.

There, dogs could identify carriers before they come in, Lindsay said. Training sniffer dogs costs many thousands of dollars, he acknowledg­ed, but “it’s cheap compared to the cost of having malaria come back into your community.”

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 ?? CITIZEN NEWS SERVICE PHOTOS ?? Top, Steven Lindsay holds a medical detection puppy in England. Right, Freya, a springer spaniel, has been trained to detect malaria parasites in sock samples taken from children in Gambia.
CITIZEN NEWS SERVICE PHOTOS Top, Steven Lindsay holds a medical detection puppy in England. Right, Freya, a springer spaniel, has been trained to detect malaria parasites in sock samples taken from children in Gambia.

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