| Literature DB >> 18631377 |
Roly D Gosling1, Christopher J Drakeley, Alex Mwita, Daniel Chandramohan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Malaria incidence has been reported to be falling in several countries in sub-Saharan Africa in recent years. This fall appears to have started before the widespread introduction of insecticide-treated nets. In the new era of calls to eliminate and eradicate malaria in sub-Saharan Africa, exploring possible causes for this fall seem pertinent. PRESENTATION OF THE HYPOTHESIS: The authors explore an argument that presumptive treatment of fever cases as malaria may have played a role in reducing transmission of malaria by the prophylactic effect of antimalarials and their widespread use. This strategy, which is already in practise is termed Opportunistic Presumptive Treatment (OPT). TESTING THE HYPOTHESIS: Further comparison of epidemiological indicators between areas with OPT and more targeted treatment is required. If data suggest a benefit of OPT, combining long acting antimalarials that have an anti-gametocyticidal activity component plus using high levels of vector control measures may reduce transmission, prevent resistant strains spreading and be easily implemented. IMPLICATIONS OF THE HYPOTHESIS: OPT is practised widely by presumptive treatment of fever in health facilities and home management of fever. Improving diagnosis using rapid diagnostic tests and thus reducing the number of doses of antimalarials given may have counter intuitive effects on transmission in the context of elimination of malaria in high to moderate transmission settings.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18631377 PMCID: PMC2488354 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-7-132
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Summary of studies describing reduction in malaria in sub-Saharan Africa
| Sub-Saharan Africa1 | 1985 to 1999; 2000 to 2007 | Parasite prevalence abstracted from over 2,000 sources | 15% (average) reduction | No reason given |
| Coastal Kenya2 | 1999 to 2007 | Malaria specific hospital admissions | 63%, 53% and 28% reduction in 3 district hospitals | Malaria control interventions |
| Ifakara, Tanzania3 | 1995 to 2000 | Incidence of malaria in < 5 year old children | Reduced from 0.8 to 0.43 episodes per child per year | Economic improvements, liberalisation of health sector and malaria control interventions |
| Zanzibar, Tanzania4 | 2003 to 2006 | Parasite prevalence | 97% reduction | Artemisinin Combination Therapy and Insecticide Treated Nets |
| Mozambique, South Africa and Swaziland5 | 2000–2004 | Parasite prevalence | > 60% fall in parasite prevalence in all 3 zones studied | Indoor residual spraying |
| Guinea-Bissau6 | 1994 versus 2003/2004 | Parasite prevalence | Reduced from 44–79% to 3% | Untreated bed nets and urbanisation |
| Eritrea7 | 2000 to 2004 | Incidence of clinical malaria and case fatality rate reported by health facilities | Decrease in malaria incidence of 83.3% and case fatality by from 0.21 to 0.14% | Climate change and malaria control methods (ITNs, IRS and early case detection and treatment) |