Literature DB >> 2207399

Comparison of chloroquine, pyrimethamine and sulfadoxine, and chlorproguanil and dapsone as treatment for falciparum malaria in pregnant and non-pregnant women, Kakamega District, Kenya.

M Keuter1, A van Eijk, M Hoogstrate, M Raasveld, M van de Ree, W A Ngwawe, W M Watkins, J B Were, A D Brandling-Bennett.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare treatment and protection against falciparum malaria in pregnant and non-pregnant women with three drug regimens.
DESIGN: Prospective intervention study with six weeks' follow up. Patients received one of three drug regimens in order of entry.
SETTING: Primary care hospital and secondary girls' school in rural western Kenya. PATIENTS: 158 of 988 pregnant women (89 primigravid and 69 multigravid) in the third trimester and 105 of 1488 non-pregnant schoolgirls of reproductive age were parasitaemic (more than 500 asexual forms/microliter. These women were divided into three treatment groups by gravid state.
INTERVENTIONS: Women were treated with chloroquine base 25 mg/kg over three days or pyrimethamine 75 mg and sulfadoxine 1500 mg as a single dose or chlorproguanil 1.2 mg/kg and dapsone 2.4 mg/kg as a single dose. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Parasitaemia and haemoglobin concentrations measured at seven day intervals for six weeks.
RESULTS: Primigravid women were more likely to be parasitaemic on follow up than multigravidas or nulligravidas, whose response was about the same. Parasites did not clear by day 7 in primigravidas in six (20%) of 30 who received chloroquine, three (8%) of 35 treated with pyrimethamine and sulfadoxine, and none of 23 treated with chlorproguanil and dapsone. At day 28, 83%, 19%, and 67% of primigravidas in these treatment groups were parasitaemic. Haemoglobin concentrations rose in all women, but improvement was sustained only in women who remained free of parasites.
CONCLUSIONS: Clearance of parasites was better with either pyrimethamine and sulfadoxine or chlorproguanil and dapsone than with chloroquine. Longest protection was obtained with pyrimethamine and sulfadoxine.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2207399      PMCID: PMC1663772          DOI: 10.1136/bmj.301.6750.466

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ        ISSN: 0959-8138


  27 in total

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2.  The disposition of oral and intramuscular pyrimethamine/sulphadoxine in Kenyan children with high parasitaemia but clinically non-severe falciparum malaria.

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5.  Antimalarials during pregnancy: a cost-effectiveness analysis.

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Review 6.  Anti-folate drug resistance in Africa: meta-analysis of reported dihydrofolate reductase (dhfr) and dihydropteroate synthase (dhps) mutant genotype frequencies in African Plasmodium falciparum parasite populations.

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Review 7.  Intermittent preventive treatment for malaria in pregnancy in Africa: what's new, what's needed?

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8.  Randomized trial of artesunate+amodiaquine, sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine+amodiaquine, chlorproguanal-dapsone and SP for malaria in pregnancy in Tanzania.

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9.  A brief review on features of falciparum malaria during pregnancy.

Authors:  Alexandre Manirakiza; Eugène Serdouma; Richard Norbert Ngbalé; Sandrine Moussa; Samuel Gondjé; Rock Mbetid Degana; Gislain Géraud Banthas Bata; Jean Methode Moyen; Jean Delmont; Gérard Grésenguet; Abdoulaye Sepou
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  9 in total

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