Abstract
Antibodies directed against malaria parasites are easy and inexpensive to measure but remain an underutilized surveillance tool due to a lack of consensus on what to measure and how to interpret results. High throughput screening of antibodies from well-characterized cohorts offers a means to substantially improve existing assays by rationally choosing the most informative sets of responses and analytical methods. Recent data suggest that high-resolution data on malaria exposure can be obtained from a small number of samples by measuring a handful of properly chosen antibody responses. In this review, we will discuss how standardized multi-antibody assays can be developed and efficiently integrated into existing surveillance activities, with great potential to greatly augment the breadth and quality of information available to direct and monitor malaria control and elimination efforts.