| Literature DB >> 21340029 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in children less than five years of age (IPTc) has been investigated as a measure to control the burden of malaria in the Sahel and sub-Sahelian areas of Africa where malaria transmission is markedly seasonal. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21340029 PMCID: PMC3038871 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0016976
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Flow Diagram of Study Selection Process.
Characteristics of Controlled Studies.
| Cisse (2006) | Kweku (2008) | Dicko (2008) | Bojang (2010) | Dicko (2011) | Konaté (2011) | Sesay (2011) | |
| Location | Niakhar, Senegal | Hohoe, Ghana | Kambila, Mali | Basse, Gambia | Kati Region, Mali | Boussé, Burkina Faso | Farafenni Gambia |
| Entomological inoculation rate (per person per year) | 10 | 65 | 137 | 1–50 | 7–37 | 11–74 | <10 |
| Bednet usage | 22% any net | 11% ITN | <5% any net | 68% ITN | >99% ITN | 93% ITN | 93% ITN |
| IPTc Drugs | AS+SP | SP bimonthly AS+AQ bimonthly, AS+AQ | SP bimonthly | SP+AQ, SP+PQ, DHA+PQ | SP+AQ | SP+AQ | SP+AQ |
| Delivery | Trial staff at facility | CHW | Trial staff at facility | Trial staff at facility | Trial staff at facility | Trial staff at facility | CHW |
| Control | Placebo | Placebo | Nothing | Non-randomised arm | Placebo & ITN | Placebo & home management of malaria |
AQ: amodiaquine, AS: artesunate, CHW: community health worker, DHA: dihydroartemisinin, ITN: insecticide treated bednet, PQ: piperaquine, SP: sulphadoxine pyrimethamine.
Characteristics of Non-controlled Studies.
| Sokhna (2008) | Cisse (2009) | Bojang (2011) | Kweku (2009) | Cisse (unpublished) | |
| Location | Niakhar, Senegal | Ndoffane, Senegal | Basse, The Gambia | Jasikan, Ghana | Tivaouane, Senegal |
| Entomological inoculation rate (per person per year) | 10 | Not known | 1–50 | 65 | 10 |
| Bednet usage | 18% slept under intact or impregnated net | 29% slept under intact or impregnated net | 50%/62% slept under intact or impregnated net in Reproductive and Child Health trekking team and CHW arms, respectively | 19% bednet usage, 14% ITN usage | 28% bednet usage, 13% ITN usage |
| IPTc Drugs | SP+1AS monthlySP+3AS monthlyAQ+3AS monthlySP+AQ monthly | SP+AQ monthlyDHA+PQ monthlySP+PQ monthly | SP+AQ monthly | SP+AQ (May/Jun./Sept./Oct) | SP+AQ monthly |
| Delivery | Study staff | CHW | CHW or Reproductive and Child Health trekking team | Health facility (routine staff with support) or CHW | CHW |
AQ: amodiaquine, AS: artesunate, CHW: community health worker, DHA: dihydroartemisinin, ITN: insecticide treated bednet, PQ: piperaquine, SP: sulphadoxine pyrimethamine.
Assessment of risk of bias in studies.
| Study Site | Adequate sequence generation | Allocation assignment | Blinding of participants, personnel and outcome assessors | No evidence of incomplete outcome data | No evidence of selective outcome reporting | |
| Cisse (2006) | Niakhar | Yes | Yes | Yes (double blind) | Yes | Yes |
| Kweku (2008) | Hohoe | Yes | Yes | No (drug packers and principal investigator un-blinded) | Yes | Yes |
| Dicko (2008) | Kambila | Yes | Yes | No (open label, control arm received no intervention) | Yes | Yes |
| Bojang (2010) | Basse | No (control arm for malaria incidence/safety comparison non randomised) | Yes | No (open label) | No (higher loss to follow up in SP+AQ arm, 22% vs 11–12%, no obvious explanation) | Yes |
| Dicko (2011) | Kati Region | Yes | Yes | Yes (double blind) | Yes | Yes |
| Konaté (2011) | Boussé | Yes | Yes | Yes (double blind) | Yes | Yes |
| Sesay (2011) | Farafenni | Not assessed (information not available) | ||||
| Sokhna (2008) | Niakhar | No (villages chosen for logistical convenience, systematic allocation of individual children) | No (open label) | Yes | Yes | |
| Cisse (2009) | Ndoffane | Yes | Yes | No (open label) | Yes | Yes |
| Bojang (2011) | Basse | Yes | Yes | No (open label) | Yes | Yes |
| Kweku (2009) | Jasikan | Yes | Yes | No (open label) | Yes | Yes |
| Cisse | Tivaouane | Not assessed (information not available) | ||||
AQ: amodiaquine, SP: sulphadoxine pyrimethamine.
Effect of IPTc on clinical malaria during the intervention period.
| Study Site | Drug Regimen | No. of children | Definition of clinical malaria (fever or history of fever plus any level of parasitaemia) | ||||
| No. of episodes | Incidence Rate per 1000 PYAR | Rate Difference per 1000 PYAR | PE (95% CI) | ||||
| Cisse (2006) | Niakhar | SP+AS | 542 | 96 | 758 | 3681 | 83 (79–86) |
| Placebo | 546 | 438 | 4439 | - | |||
| Kweku (2008) | Hohoe | SP bimonthly | 613 | 112 | 403 | 214 | 35 (17–48) |
| AS+AQ bimonthly | 562 | 109 | 425 | 192 | 31 (13–46) | ||
| AS+AQ monthly | 626 | 44 | 153 | 464 | 75 (65–82) | ||
| Placebo | 650 | 183 | 617 | - | |||
| Dicko (2008) | Kambila | SP bimonthly | 58 | 30 | 2000 | 4544 | 69 (54–80) |
| Control | 59 | 86 | 6544 | - | |||
| Bojang (2010) | Basse | SP+AQ | 336 | 4 | 58 | 733 | 93 (79–97) |
| SP+PQ | 336 | 4 | 57 | 734 | 93 (80–97) | ||
| DHA+PQ | 336 | 7 | 103 | 688 | 87 (71–94) | ||
| Control | 286 | 41 | 791 | - | |||
| Dicko (2011) | Kati Region | SP+AQ | 1509 | 149 | 411 | 1996 | 83 (80–86) |
| Placebo | 1508 | 832 | 2407 | - | |||
| Konaté (2011) | Boussé | SP+AQ | 1509 | 416 | 1114 | 2671 | 71 (67–74) |
| Placebo | 1505 | 1232 | 3785 | - | |||
| Sesay (2011) | Farafenni | SP+AQ | 639 | 1 | 5 | 6 | 49 (−459–95) |
| Placebo | 638 | 2 | 11 | ||||
Total number of clinical malaria episodes, AQ: amodiaquine, AS: artesunate, CI: confidence interval, DHA: dihydroartemisinin, PE: protective efficacy, PQ: piperaquine, PYAR: person years at risk, SP: sulphadoxine pyrimethamine.
Figure 2Effect of IPTc on clinical malaria (any level of parasitaemia) during the intervention period.
NOTE: D+L Overall = Random effect meta-analysis, I–V Overall = Fixed effect meta-analysis. AQ: amodiaquine, AS: artesunate, bi: bimonthly administration, CI: confidence interval, DHA: dihydroartemisinin, PQ: piperaquine, SP: sulphadoxine pyrimethamine.
Effect of IPTc on mean haemoglobin/haematocrit concentrations in intervention and control arms at the end of the intervention period.
| Study Site | Drug Regimen | No. children | Mean Hb (g/dL)/Hct (%) concentration [95% CI] | p-value (z-test) | |
| Kweku (2008) | Hohoe | SP bimonthly | 550 | 9.2 (6.6–11.8) | 0.20 |
| AS+AQ bimonthly | 464 | 9.2 (6.6–11.8) | 0.23 | ||
| AS+AQ monthly | 559 | 9.4 (7.0–11.8) | 0.18 | ||
| Placebo | 589 | 9.3 (6.7–11.9) | - | ||
| Dicko (2008) | Kambila | SP bimonthly | 55 | 32.1 (31.2–33.0) | 0.80 |
| Control | 54 | 31.9 (31.0–32.8) | - | ||
| Dicko (2011) | Kati Region | SP+AQ | 1422 | 11.0 (10.7–11.2) | 0.06 |
| Placebo | 1433 | 10.7 (10.5–10.9) | - | ||
| Konaté (2011) | Boussé | SP+AQ | 1444 | 11.0 (10.9–11.1) | <0.001 |
| Placebo | 1441 | 10.4 (10.3–10.4) | - | ||
| Sesay (2011) | Farafenni | SP+AQ | 513 | 10.2 (7.1–13.3) | 0.79 |
| Placebo | 533 | 10.3 (7.4–13.2) | - |
AQ: amodiaquine, AS: artesunate, CI: confidence interval, DHA: dihydroartemisinin, Hb: haemoglobin, Hct: haematocrit, PQ: piperaquine, SP: sulphadoxine pyrimethamine.
Effect of IPTc on prevalence of parasitaemia, dhps and dhfr resistance markers measured at cross sectional surveys during the intervention year.
| Study | Arm | Children with asexual Parasitaemia | p-value | Parasite carriage of resistance markers | Estimated minimum prevalence of resistant parasitaemia amongst children | |||||
|
| p-value |
| p-value |
|
| |||||
| Pre-intervention | ||||||||||
| Cisse (2006) | Niakhar | SP+AS | 37 (516) | 0.77 | 51 (71) | 0.06 | 28 (67) | 0.92 | 19 | 10 |
| Placebo | 36 (512) | - | 67 (69) | - | 29 (72) | - | 24 | 11 | ||
| Dicko (2008) | Kambila | SP bimonthly | 36 (53) | 0.14 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Control | 23 (53) | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | ||
| Dicko (2011) | Kati Region | SP+AQ | - | - | 59 (41) | - | 38 (41) | - | - | - |
| Placebo | - | - | - | - | ||||||
| Konaté (2011) | Boussé | SP+AQ | - | - | 33 (132) | - | - | - | - | |
| Placebo | - | - | - | - | ||||||
| Sesay (2011) | Farafenni | SP+AQ | 0.5 (639) | 0.99 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Placebo | 0.5 (638) | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | ||
| Post-intervention | ||||||||||
| Cisse (2006) | Niakhar | SP+AS | 14 (440) | <0.001 | 95 (41) | 0.01 | 86 (28) | <0.001 | 13 | 12 |
| Placebo | 37 (446) | - | 75 (122) | - | 44 (89) | - | 28 | 16 | ||
| Kweku (2008) | Hohoe | SP bimonthly | 16 (550) | 0.14 | 90 (51) | 0.41 | 63 (54) | 0.33 | 14 | 10 |
| AS+AQ bimonthly | 22 (464) | 0.29 | 84 (55) | 0.86 | 63 (51) | 0.35 | 18 | 14 | ||
| AS+AQ monthly | 5 (559) | <0.001 | 92 (13) | 0.49 | 45 (11) | 0.62 | 4 | 2 | ||
| Placebo | 20 (589) | - | 85 (53) | - | 54 (54) | - | 17 | 11 | ||
| Dicko (2008) | Kambila | SP bimonthly | 4 (55) | 0.04 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Control | 15 (54) | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | ||
| Dicko (2011) | Kati Region | SP+AQ | 7 (1405) | <0.001 | 49 (83) | 0.02 | 68 (83) | <0.001 | 5 | 6 |
| Placebo | 13 (1423) | - | 34 (160) | 44 (165) | 6 | 8 | ||||
| Konaté (2011) | Boussé | SP+AQ | 11 (1436) | <0.001 | 50 (114) | 0.61 | 6 | - | ||
| Placebo | 42 (1430) | - | 53 (122) | 22 | - | |||||
| Sesay (2011) | Farafenni | SP+AQ | 0.6 (513) | 0.52 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Placebo | 0.9 (533) | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | ||
Any density parasitaemia,
Chi2 test, AQ: amodiaquine, AS: artesunate, DHA: dihydroartemisinin, N = total number of samples analysed, PQ: piperaquine, SP: sulphadoxine pyrimethamine.
Figure 3Effect of IPTc on clinical malaria (any level of parasitaemia) during the subsequent transmission season (following IPTc administration).
NOTE: D+L Overall = Random effect meta-analysis, I–V Overall = Fixed effect meta-analysis. AQ: amodiaquine, AS: artesunate, bi: bimonthly administration, CI: confidence interval, SP: sulphadoxine pyrimethamine.