A resurgence of falciparum malaria occurred in the central highlands of Madagascar in the 1980s and was responsible for an outbreak in 1986-1987. Since 1989, transmission has decreased dramatically. In April 1991, we investigated the humoral and cellular immune responses of 53 inhabitants of the village of Manarintsoa to six synthetic peptides that reproduced the major B and/or T cell epitopes of the Pfl 55/ring-infected erythrocyte surface antigen (RESA) of Plasmodium falciparum. The presence of RESA peptide-reactive T cells was assessed by lymphocyte proliferation assay as well as by detection of in vitro production of interferon-gamma and interleukin-2. The mean values of these cellular responses were low, and the results obtained in these three tests showed no correlation. Twenty-seven subjects presented with anti-RESA antibodies as detected by modified immunofluorescent assay, but the mean levels of anti-peptide antibodies were low. When compared with data obtained in January 1988 from the same subjects with three of the six peptides, the present data demonstrated a decrease in the response to these peptides in terms of both proliferative response and mean antibody titers. The mean values of anti-RESA antibodies remained unchanged. The fact that cellular and humoral responses to the major Pfl 55/RESA epitopes decreased but did not disappear probably reflects both the remainder of the acquired immunity resulting from the 1986-1987 malaria outbreak, and its conservation by the very low level of transmission since 1989.