| Literature DB >> 24471654 |
H Mpairwe1, R Tweyongyere, A Elliott.
Abstract
It has been proposed that helminth infection may be particularly detrimental during pregnancy, through adverse effects on maternal anaemia and on birth outcomes, and that anthelminthic treatment during pregnancy will therefore be particularly beneficial. However, the few treatment trials that have been conducted have given, but little support to this notion and further trials in settings of nutritional stress are needed. It has also been proposed that prenatal exposure to helminth infection has an important effect on the development of the foetal immune response. There is evidence that this may impact, long-term, upon responses to helminth and nonhelminth antigens, and to allergens. Exposure to helminths in utero may also have nonspecific effects that may modify the offspring's susceptibility to diseases mediated by inflammation, including metabolic disorders. The mechanisms of such effects are not known, but they deserve to be explored as current epidemiological findings suggest the possibility of primary prevention for inflammatory conditions such as allergy, through intervention during pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: allergy; anaemia; birthweight; helminth; offspring; pregnancy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24471654 PMCID: PMC4260141 DOI: 10.1111/pim.12101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasite Immunol ISSN: 0141-9838 Impact factor: 2.280
Clinical trials of anthelminthic treatment during pregnancy
| Country; trial name | Participants | Helminth prevalence | Intervention | Outcomes assessed | Main results | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Entebbe, Uganda; Entebbe mother and baby study | 2507 | Hookworm | 45% | Alb 400 mg vs. placebo pzq 40 mg/kg vs. placebo each single dose | Maternal anaemia | No effects | |
| 21% | Maternal HIV load | Reduced by alb | |||||
| 18% | MTCT of HIV | No effects | |||||
| 12% | Congenital abnormalities | No effects | |||||
| 9% | Adverse birth outcomes | No effects | |||||
| 2% | Birthweight | No effects | |||||
| Infant mortality | No effects | ||||||
| Infant response to vaccines | No effects | ||||||
| Infant malaria, diarrhoea, pneumonia | No effects | ||||||
| Infantile eczema | Increased by alb, pzq | ||||||
| Infant cognitive development | No effects | ||||||
| Freetown and Port Loko, Sierra Leone | 184 | Hookworm | 66% | Alb 400 mg vs. calcium and vitamin D single dose | Change in anaemia btw 1st & 3rd trimester | Benefit | |
| 74% | Change in iron status btw 1st & 3rd trimester | No effect | |||||
| 20% | Miscarriages | No effect | |||||
| Congenital abnormalities | No effect | ||||||
| Iquitos, Peru | 1042 | Hookworm | 46% | Meb 500 mg single dose | Maternal anaemia | No effect | |
| 82% | Birthweight | No effect | |||||
| 64% | Low birthweight | Reduced | |||||
| Congenital abnormalities | No effect | ||||||
| Adverse birth outcomes | No effect | ||||||
| Masindi, Uganda | 591 STH-infected 241 comparison | Hookworm | 67% | Alb400 mg vs. ivc (dose according to height) vs. ivc plus alb | Helminth “cure” | Alb superior for hkwm | |
| 5% | Miscarriage, prematurity | No effect | |||||
| 0·5% | Congenital abnormalities | No effect | |||||
| 4% | Maternal haemoglobin | No effect | |||||
| Birthweight | No effect | ||||||
| Infant haemoglobin | No effect | ||||||
| Infant mortality | No effect | ||||||
| Rufiji, Tanzania | 3080 cluster randomized by antenatal clinic | Albendazole | Maternal anaemia (<10·5 g/dL) at term | No effect | |||
| Maternal haemoglobin (Hb) at term | No effect | ||||||
| Maternal anaemia 4 months post-partum | Benefit | ||||||
| Maternal Hb 4 months post-partum | Benefit | ||||||
| Lamberene, Gabon | 65 | 100% | Mefloquine 15 mg/kg vs. SP (3 tablets of 500/25 mg) twice during pregnancy | Helminth “cure” | Mefloquine superior | ||
Miscarriages, still births, neonatal deaths and (in Gyorkos 2006) prematurity
Necator americanus
only infected women were included in the treatment trial; alb, albendazole; pzq, praziquantel; meb, mebendazole; ivc, ivermectin; STH, soil-transmitted helminths; btw, between primary outcomes highlighted.
Figure 1Possible mechanisms by which maternal helminth infections might influence foetal immunological development.