| Literature DB >> 21777441 |
Nyokabi Musila1, Newton Opiyo, Mike English.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Severe malaria is a major contributor of deaths in African children up to five years of age. One valuable tool to support health workers in the management of diseases is clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) developed using robust methods. A critical assessment of the World Health Organization (WHO) and Kenyan paediatric malaria treatment guidelines with quinine was undertaken, with a focus on the quality of the evidence and transparency of the shift from evidence to recommendations.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21777441 PMCID: PMC3152530 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-10-201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Summary of World Health Organization (2010) and Government of Kenya (2005 and 2010) clinical practice guidelines for the management of children with severe malaria
| Treatment for children aged < 5 years with a diagnosis of severe malaria | GoK 2005 | GoK 2010 Malaria Case Management Guidelines | WHO 2010 Malaria Case Management Guidelines |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-referral quinine loading dose | |||
| First-line treatment with quinine dose |
*Based on 1998 DoMC Malaria Treatment Guidelines.
Study selection inclusion/exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Uncomplicated malaria | |
| Randomized Controlled Trials (observational studies to be considered if no RCT evidence) | IR administration |
| Children < 5 years old (older children and adult data to be considered if no studies in children) | |
| Diagnosis of severe or complicated malaria, confirmed with microscopy or rapid diagnostic test or cerebral malaria | |
| African setting | |
| IM or IV administration |
Evidence quality and level of confidence in estimates using the GRADE approach
| Evidence Quality | Level of confidence in estimate |
|---|---|
| High | Further research is |
| Moderate | Further research is |
| Low | Further research is |
| Very low | The estimate of effect is very uncertain |
Adapted from Guyatt et al 2008 [26]
Characteristics of studies that evaluated quinine loading dose (Systematic review 1)
| Test quinine sulphate dose (IV) | Comparator quinine sulphate dose (IV) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | Age range | Country | Loading dose | Maintenance dose | Uniform dose |
| Assimadi 2002* (N = 72) | 8 months to 15 years | Benin | 21 mg/kg | 10.5 mg/kg every 12 hours | 15.9 mg/kg every 12 hours |
| Fargier 1991* (N = 20) | 15 years and above | Cameroon | 19 mg/kg | 9.7 mg/kg every 8 hours | 9.7 mg/kg every 8 hours |
| Pasvol 1991 | up to 12 years | Kenya | 20 mg/kg | 10 mg/kg every 12 hours | 5 to 10 mg/kg every 12 hours |
| Tombe 1992 (N = 33) | 14 years and above | Kenya | 20 mg/kg | 10 mg/kg every 8 hours | 10 mg/kg every 8 hours |
*Reported quinine doses converted from quinine base to quinine salt using salt conversion factor of 1.21
N = 20 patients who received IM quinine were excluded from this analysis
Adapted from Lesi et al 2004 Cochrane systematic review [9]
Characteristics of studies that evaluated effectiveness and pharmacokinetics of quinine by route of administration (IV vs IM or indirect comparison of IR vs IV and IM vs IR) (Systematic review 3)
| Study ID | Age range | Country | IV Quinine Dose | IM Quinine Dose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Waller 1990 (N = 21) | 19 months to 8 years | Gambia | N/A | 20 mg/kg loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 12 hours |
| Pasvol 1991 | up to 12 years | Kenya | 20 mg/kg loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 12 hours | 20 mg/kg loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 12 hours |
| Krishna 1991 (N = 120) | 1 to 10 years | Ghana | N/A | 20 mg/kg loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 12 hours |
| Schapira 1993 (N = 104) | 6 months to 7 years | Mozambique | 20 mg/kg loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 8 hours | 20 mg/kg loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 8 hours |
| Winstanley 1993 (N = 22) | 7 months to 6.8 years | Kenya | 14 mg/kg loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 12 hours | 20 mg/kg loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 12 hours |
| Winstanley 1994 (N = 9) | 1 to 3 years | Kenya | 15 mg/kg loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 12 hours | N/A |
| van Hensbroek 1996 (N = 16) | 5 to 23 months | The Gambia | 20 mg/kg loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 12 hours | 20 mg/kg loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 12 hours |
| Achan 2007† (N = 110) | 6 months to 5 years | Uganda | 20 mg/kg base loading dose, then 10 mg/kg every 8 hours, until oral treatment possible | 8 mg/kg base every 8 hours, until oral treatment possible |
| Bareness 1998† (N = 77) | 2 to 15 years | Niger | 11.8 mg/kg base loading dose, then 8.8 mg/kg every 8 hours for 2 days, then oral treatment with chloroquine | 4.7 mg/kg base every 8 hours for 2 days, then oral treatment with chloroquine |
| Bareness 2001† (N = 58) | 2 to 15 years | Niger | 17.9 mg/kg base loading dose, then 11.75 mg/kg base every 12 hours | 7.5 mg/kg base every 12 hours |
† Quinimax formulation which consists of 96% quinine, 2.5% quinidine, 0.68% cinchonine, and 0.67% cinchonidine
‡N = 21 patients who received a lower dose of IV administered 10 mg/kg loading dose then 5 mg/kg every 12 hours were excluded from the IV vs IM effectiveness analysis only.
Figure 1Meta analysis of comparison of effect of IR and IV administered quinine on mortality in African children.
Pharmacokinetic parameters of IV and IM administered quinine in African children (Systematic review 3b)
| Study ID | Evidence | Route of admn | Sample size per arm | Quinine loading dose | Quinine maintenance dose | Infusion time | Cmax (mg/l) | tmax (h) | t1/2 (h) | Cl (ml/min/kg) | Vd (l/kg) | AUC (mg/l/h) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pasvol 1991 (N = 43) | Low | IV | n = 21 | 10 mg/kg | 5 mg/kg | 2 h | 9.7 ± 5.3 | 2.7 ± 1.3 | 8.9 ± 4.0 | 1.36 ± 0.58 | 0.87 ± 0.27 | 145 ± 61 |
| Pasvol 1991 (N = 43) | Low | IV | n = 18 | 20 mg/kg | 10 mg/kg bd | 2 h | 15.3 ± 5.5 | 2.4 ± 1.5 | 12.5 ± 3.2 | 1.19 ± 0.29 | 1.22 ± 0.16 | 254 ± 86 |
| van Hensbroek 1996 (N = 16) | Very | IV | n = 6 | 20 mg/kg | 10 mg/kg bd | 4 h | 17.48 ± 2.43 | - | 13.16 ± 6.43 | 0.51 ± 0.16 | 1.04 ± 0.21 | 354 ± 143 |
Legend:
Cmax (mg/l): Maximum circulating concentration
tmax (h): Time at maximum circulating concentration
t1/2 (h): Half-life
Cl (ml/min/kg): Clearance
Vd (l/kg): Volume of distribution
AUC (mg/l/h): Area under the curve.
Characteristics of studies that evaluated risk of hypoglyacemia with IV-infused quinine (Systematic review 4)
| Study ID | Evidence quality | Age range | Country | IV Quinine Dose and diluent | Infusion time | Glucose Threshold (mmol/l) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Molyneux 1989 | Very low | 2 to 9 years | Malawi | 10 mg/kg in 5% glucose in half strength Darrow's solution | 1 h | 80 | < 2.2 |
| 10 mg/kg in 5% glucose in half strength Darrow's solution | 3 h | 80 | < 2.2 | ||||
| 20 mg/kg in 5% glucose in half strength Darrow's solution | 3 h | 80 | < 2.2 | ||||
| Okitolonda 1987 | Very low | 6 to 10 years | Zaïre | 10 mg/kg in 30 ml saline supplemented with 2.5% glucose every 8 hours | 1 h | 105 | < 2.8 |
| Kawo 1991 | Very low | Up to 7 years | Tanzania | 10 mg/kg in 10 ml/kg of 5% glucose every 8 hours | 4 h | Not reported | < 2.2 |
| Ogetii 2010 | Low | Up to 12 years | Kenya | 15 mg/kg loading dose in 5% dextrose then 10 mg/kg in 5% dextrose every 12 hours | 2 h | Not reported | < 3, < 2.8 and < 2.2 |
| 20 mg/kg loading dose in 5% dextrose then 10 mg/kg in 5% dextrose every 8 hours | 4 h | Not reported | < 3, < 2.8 and < 2.2 | ||||
| Taylor 1988 | Very low | 7 months to 8 years | Malawi | 20 mg/kg loading dose then 10 mg/kg every 8 hours | Loading dose 4 h, | 80 | < 2.2 |
| Dondorp 2010 | High | Up to 15 years | Multi-centre trial in Mozambique, The Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Tanzania, Nigeria, Uganda, Rwanda and Democratic Republic of Congo | ¥20 mg/kg loading dose in 5-10 ml/kg of 5% dextrose then 10 mg/kg in 5-10 ml/kg of 5% dextrose every 8 hours | Loading dose 4 h, | Not reported | Not reported |
*Data from N = 5 adults were excluded from this analysis
Ogetti 2010 = Retrospective review of case notes. ¥Quinine was administered by the IM and IV route.
Summary of quinine systematic reviews in the treatment of severe malaria in African children and recommendations for evidence-informed clinical practice
| Clinical Issue | Recommendation | Evidence quality/strength of recommendation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quinine loading dose [ | Loading dose results in faster clearance of malaria parasites from the blood stream and thus faster clearance of fever and thus loading dose should be administered, with monitoring and patient/care giver support for episodes of partial hearing loss adverse event | Moderate | |
| Quinine route of administration: IV vs IM [ | The clinical outcome of IV-administered quinine vs. IM-administered quinine is equivocal in the treatment of African children with severe malaria. However, due to reported side effects with IM route, such as risk of abscess and pain, the IV route is preferred. | Low to very low | |
| Quinine paediatric dose [ | Pharmacokinetic profile of the old and new Kenyan dosing regimen are similar | Low | |
| Quinine and risk of hypoglycaemia [ | The risk of hypoglycaemia with quinine treatment in African children with severe malaria may be countered by administering the quinine at a low infusion rate. | Low to high | |
| Quinine vs artemisinin derivatives [ | Artesunate is a superior treatment to quinine for African children with severe malaria and should be strongly considered for implementation as a first line treatment, taking contextual factors such as cost-effectiveness into account | High |