| Literature DB >> 21864343 |
Seif A Shekalaghe1, Chris Drakeley, Sven van den Bosch, Roel ter Braak, Wouter van den Bijllaardt, Charles Mwanziva, Salimu Semvua, Alutu Masokoto, Frank Mosha, Karina Teelen, Rob Hermsen, Lucy Okell, Roly Gosling, Robert Sauerwein, Teun Bousema.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective mass drug administration (MDA) with anti-<span class="Disease">malarial drugs can clear the human infectious reservoir for malaria and thereby interrupt malaria transmission. The likelihood of success of MDA depends on the intensity and seasonality of malaria transmission, the efficacy of the intervention in rapidly clearing all malaria parasite stages and the degree to which symptomatic and asymptomatic parasite carriers participate in the intervention. The impact of MDA with the gametocytocidal drug combination sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) plus artesunate (AS) plus primaquine (PQ, single dose 0.75 mg/kg) on malaria transmission was determined in an area of very low and seasonal malaria transmission in northern Tanzania.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21864343 PMCID: PMC3169516 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-10-247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1The study villages of Kiruani, Majengo, Magadini and Korongo. Each village is presented separately. The north-south arrow relates to the position of households within a village, not to the relative location of villages. Each dot represents a household, dark dots represent intervention households; open dots control households. Buffer zones are depicted in transparent grey. The intervention (I) and control (C) clusters are numbered.
Drug treatment in the intervention arm by age category
| Age | Average weight, median (IQR) | SP | AS | PQ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-2 y | 11.0 (9.5 - 11.6) | 250/12.5 | 25 | 7.5 |
| 3-4 y | 12.9 (11.5 - 14.5) | 500/25 | 50 | 15 |
| 5-7 y | 16.7 (14.8 - 19.0) | 500/25 | 75 | 15 |
| 8-11 y | 23.0 (20.5 - 27.1) | 750/37.5 | 100 | 22.5 |
| 12-14 y | 33.7 (28.0 - 38.8) | 1000/50 | 125 | 22.5 |
| 15-16 y | 43.3 (38.4 - 54.0) | 1000/50 | 150 | 30 |
| 17-18 y | 52.5 (47.9 - 56.5) | 1250/67.5 | 200 | 37.5 |
| > 18 y | 54.0 (46.0 - 61.5) | 1500/75 | 200 | 45 |
IQR = interquartile range; SP = sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine; AS = artesunate; PQ = primaquine. SP tablets were given as the nearest complete tablet; AS as the nearest ½ tablet; PQ tablets were given as 7.5 mg or 15 mg tablets or a combination.
Figure 2Seasonality, entomology and timing of the intervention. Rainfall data is given in the dashed line in mm/week; the average number of female anophelines caught per night in five sentinel houses in Kiruani is represented by solid diamonds; the average number of female anophelines caught per night in ten sentinel houses in Magadini and Korongo is represented by open diamonds. The drug intervention was completed 3-5 weeks before the start of the rains in early April.
Baseline data
| Intervention (8 clusters) | Placebo (n = 8 clusters) | |
|---|---|---|
| Present at the time of the intervention | 1,110 | 2,347 |
| Arrived in the study area after the intervention | 91 | 114 |
| Proportion female, % (95% CI) | 50.0 (47.0 - 53.1) | 49.2 (47.2 - 51.1) |
| Age, median (IQR) | 12 (5 - 26) | 16 (6-32) |
| Parasite positive by rapid diagnostic test, % (95% CI) | 0.4 (0.0 - 2.0) | 1.0 (0.1 - 3.4) |
| Parasite positive by microscopy, % (95% CI) | 0.0 (0.0 - 1.3) | 0.0 (0.0 - 1.8) |
Figure 3Participant flow chart.
Parasite carriage before and after the intervention
| Asexual parasite carriage | Gametocyte carriage | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| microscope | QT-NASBA | microscope | QT-NASBA | |||
| 2005 | 1.9 (1.4-2.5) | 32.5 (28.2-37.0) | 0.4 (0.2-0.7) | 15.0 (11.9-18.7) | ||
| 2008 | Pre-intervention | Intervention | 0.0 (0-2.1) | 2.6 (0.3 - 9.2) | 0.0 (0-2.1) | ND |
| Control | 0.0 (0-1.7) | 2.9 (0.04 - 10.1) | 0.0 (0-1.7) | ND | ||
| Evaluation I | Intervention | 0.0 (0-1.8) | 0.0 (0.0 - 6.5) | 0.0 (0-1.8) | ND | |
| Control | 0.0 (0-1.6) | 0.0 (0.0 - 7.2) | 0.0 (0-1.6) | ND | ||
| Evaluation II-IV | Intervention | 0.0 (0-0.7) | 0.0 (0.0 - 2.4 | 0.0 (0-0.7) | ND | |
| Control | 0.0 (0-0.5) | 1.4 (0.2 - 5.1) | 0.0 (0-0.5) | ND | ||
Asexual parasite carriage was determined by microscopy, reading 100 microscopic fields, and 18S rRNA-based QT-NASBA that detects all parasite stages at an estimated sensitivity of 20 parasites/mL. Gametocytes were detected by microscopy, separately reading 100 microscopic fields, and Pfs25 mRNA based QT-NASBA that is gametocyte specific and has a sensitivity of 20-100 gametocytes/mL. ND = not done