“The majority of malaria infections in the United States occur among persons who have traveled to regions with ongoing malaria transmission,” wrote Kimberly E. Mace, PhD, and colleagues from the CDC’s Malaria Branch. “However, malaria is occasionally acquired by persons who have not traveled out of the country through exposure to infected blood products, congenital transmission, nosocomial exposure, or local mosquito-borne transmission.”
According to Mace and colleagues, in 2017 there was a relative increase of 4% in confirmed cases of malaria reported to the CDC from 2016, when there were 2,078 reported cases — the previous highest total since 1971. Cases in 1971 occurred predominately among military personnel who returned from deployment in Southeast Asia.
In 2017, a total of 1,290 (59.7%) cases of malaria were reported among U.S. civilians, 26 (1.2%) among U.S. military members, 516 (23.9%) among non-U.S. residents and 329 (15.2%) among people with unknown residential status.
It was determined that 2,112 cases (97.7%) were imported from countries where malaria is endemic. Only 42 cases had an incomplete travel history, which prevented the authors from classifying their origin.
According to the authors, the increase in current U.S. malaria cases coincides with an increasing trend of U.S. citizens taking international flights each year. Of the total number of cases reported in 2017, 84.2% originated in Africa, and the proportion of cases from West Africa increased from 51.1% in 2016 to 56.3%.
[Editor’s note: This story was updated to clarify that more malaria cases were reported in 2017 in the United States than in any other year since 1971.]