Houston Chronicle

Dogs can detect malaria; now, how to use that?

- By Donald G. McNeil Jr.

Dogs have such exquisitel­y sensitive noses that they can detect bombs, drugs, citrus and other contraband in luggage or pockets. Is it possible that they can sniff out even malaria? And when might that be useful?

A small pilot study has shown that dogs can accurately identify socks worn overnight by children infected with malaria parasites — even when the children had cases so mild they were not feverish.

The study, a collaborat­ion between British and Gambian scientists and the British charity Medical Detection Dogs, was released last week at the annual convention of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

Such canine prowess is not surprising. Since 2004, dogs have shown that they can detect bladder cancer in urine samples, lung cancer in breath samples and ovarian cancer in blood samples. Trained dogs warn owners with diabetes when their blood sugar has dropped dangerousl­y low and owners with epilepsy when they are on the verge of a seizure.

The new study, its authors said, does not mean that dogs will replace laboratori­es. Inexpensiv­e rapid tests for malaria have been available for over a decade.

But for sorting through crowds, malaria-sniffing dogs could be very useful.

Some countries and regions that have eliminated the disease share heavily trafficked borders with others that have not.

And when a region is close to eliminatin­g malaria, dogs could sweep through villages, nosing out silent carriers — people who are not ill but have parasites in their blood that mosquitoes could pass on to others.

Dog noses are 10,000 to 100,000 times as sensitive as human noses. Scientists are not sure what dogs are smelling, but it is known that malaria parasites produce volatile aldehydes like those found in perfumes.

If just one chemical indicated cancer or malaria, “we’d have discovered it by now,” said Claire Guest, who founded Medical Detection Dogs in 2008 and oversaw dog training in the study. “It’s more like a tune of many notes, and the dogs can pick it up.”

Best for this task are dogs bred to hunt — pointers, spaniels and Labradors — and dogs with relaxed relationsh­ips with their owners, she said.

The initial trials were just to prove that detection was feasible, said Steve W. Lindsay, an entomologi­st at Durham University in Britain who said he was inspired by a dog sniffing luggage for contraband food at Washington Dulles Internatio­nal Airport.

This preliminar­y study involved training two dogs to sniff rows of jars containing bits of thin nylon socks that had been worn overnight by Gambian children. When the dogs, a Labrador-golden retriever mix and a Labrador, recognized the odors, they were supposed to stop and point at the jar.

They were about 70 percent accurate at spotting socks from children with malaria but 90 percent accurate at not giving false positives.

Their accuracy might have been higher under different circumstan­ces, Lindsay said. Some children probably shared beds with infected siblings, and the socks had to be stored in a freezer for a year while the dogs were trained and the study design approved.

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