| Literature DB >> 19112496 |
Caterina I Fanello1, Corine Karema, Pamela Avellino, Germana Bancone, Aline Uwimana, Sue J Lee, Umberto d'Alessandro, David Modiano.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency is the most common inherited human enzyme defect. This deficiency provides some protection from clinical malaria, but it can also cause haemolysis after administration of drugs with oxidant properties.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19112496 PMCID: PMC2603295 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0004031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
G6PD (A-) frequency according to sex and treatment (AQ+SP: amodiaquine+sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine; CD+A chlorproguanil-dapsone+artesunate).
| CD+A | AQ+SP | Total | |
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| Hemizygous | 18 | 16 | 34 |
| Normal | 162 | 158 | 320 |
| Total | 180 | 174 | 354 |
| G6PD (A-) % frequency |
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| Heterozygous | 23 | 21 | 44 |
| Homozygous | 3 | 1 | 4 |
| Normal | 137 | 163 | 300 |
| Total | 163 | 185 | 348 |
| G6PD (A-) % frequency |
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Comparison between boys and girls p = 0.3.
Demographic and clinical characteristics of children at enrolment according to treatment (AQ+SP: amodiaquine+sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine; CD+A chlorproguanil-dapsone+artesunate) and presence of the G6PD (A-) deficiency allele (hemizygous males, homozygous and heterozygous females).
| Demography and clinical characteristics | AQ+SP G6PD(B) | AQ+SP G6PD(A-) | CD+A G6PD(B) | CD+A G6PD(A-) |
| Female∶Male | 163∶158 | 22∶16 | 137∶162 | 26∶18 |
| Mean age in months (SD) | 28.3 (14.1) | 31.9 (14.3) | 29.0 (14.9) | 30.1 (14.0) |
| Mean weight in kg (SD) | 11.0 (2.5) | 11.8 (2.6) | 11.2 (2.4) | 11.0 ( 2.2) |
| Mean temperature °C (SD) | 38.5 (1.3) | 38.4 (1.5) | 38.5 (1.3) | 38.9 (1.2) |
| Axillary temperature ≥37.5°C (%) | 230/321 (71.7) | 26/38 (68.4) | 221/299 (73.9) | 35/44 (79.6) |
| Geometric mean asexual | 22262.8 (19697.6–25162.0) | 28158.0 (19348.4–40978.6) | 22731.5 (19860.0–26018.2) | 26808.5 (18950.4–37925.0) |
| Median PCV (range) | 33 (22–43) | 34 (23–39) | 33 (21–46) | 31 (23–38) |
| Splenomegaly (%) | 2/321 (0.6) | 0/38 | 4/295 (1.34) | 0/44 |
| Hepatomegaly (%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Figure 1Mean PCV according to treatment group (AQ+SP: amodiaquine+sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine and CD+A: chlorproguanil-dapsone+artesunate), G6PD status (deficient: hemizygous males and homozygous females) and day of follow-up.
Mean fractional reduction (±SD) in PCV according to treatment group (AQ+SP: amodiaquine+sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine; CD+A: chlorproguanil-dapsone+artesunate), G6PD status (deficient: hemizygous males and homozygous females) and proportion of patients whose PCV fell below 20 and 25%.
| Group | n | Fractional reduction (SD) | No. with PCV below 20% (%) | No. with PCV below 25% (%) |
| CD+A G6PD (B) | 322 | 14.4 (7.9) | 7 (2.2) | 71 (22.0) |
| CD+A G6PD (A-) | 21 | 22.3 (11.8) | 4 (19.0) | 10 (47.6) |
| AQ+SP G6PD (B) | 342 | 16.4 (9.3) | 9 (2.6) | 93 (27.2) |
| AQ+SP G6PD (A-) | 17 | 15.1 (9.4) | 1 (5.9) | 4 (23.5) |
| p = 0.0001 | p = 0.005 | p = 0.05 |
Results by gender: CD+A G6PD (B) 5 girls and 2 boys; CD+A G6PD, 4 boys; AQ+SP G6PD (B) 1 girl and 8 boys; AQ+SP G6PD (A-) 1 girl.
Relative Risk (95% CI) of receiving a blood transfusion according to G6PD status following treatment with chlorproguanil-dapsone+artesunate (CD+A) or amodiaquine+sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (AQ+SP).
| CD+A | AQ+SP | TOTAL | |
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| Normal | 2 | 3/321 | 5/620 |
| Heterozygous girls | 0/23 | 1/21 | 1/44 |
| Homozygous girls | 0/3 | 1/1 | 1/4 |
| Hemizygous boys | 3/18 | 0/16 | 3/34 |
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| Normal | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Hemizygous boys | 24.9 (4.4, 139.8) |
| 10.9 (2.7, 43.9) |
| Hemizygous boys+homozygous girls | 21.4 (3.8, 120.9) | 6.3 (0.7, 57.4) | 13.1 (3.7, 46.6) |
| Hemizygous boys+homozygous and heterozygous girls | 10.2 (1.8, 59.3) | 5.6 (1.0, 32.7) | 7.6 (2.2, 25.6) |
One patient G6PD (B) was transfused at day 14 for a concomitant disease. Results excluding this case are: RR 49.8 (5.5, 455.5), RR 42.7 (4.6, 393.1) and RR 20.4 (2.2, 191.7), for hemizygous boys, hemizygous boys+homozygous girls, and hemizygous boys+homozygous girls+heterozygous girls, respectively.