| Literature DB >> 26403465 |
Kerstin Sundell1, Prasanna Jagannathan2, Liusheng Huang3, Victor Bigira4, James Kapisi5, Mary M Kakuru6, Rada Savic7, Moses R Kamya8, Grant Dorsey9, Francesca Aweeka10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anti-malarial chemoprevention with dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DHA/PQ) is a promising tool for malaria control, but its efficacy in children may be limited by inadequate drug exposure.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26403465 PMCID: PMC4582734 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-015-0908-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Assigned percentile per collected PK measurement and piperaquine exposure scores. Percentiles for each collected plasma sample of piperaquine, plotted against the age of the child at the time of the measurement. The red text displays the percentile boundaries of the piperaquine scores 0, 1, 2 and 3. Solid line represents best fit relationship between days since start of intervention and piperaquine exposure percentile with dotted line showing 95 % confidence intervals
Descriptive statistics of study cohort followed from 6–24 months of age
| Characteristic | No chemoprevention | Monthly DHA/PQ |
|---|---|---|
| Number of children followed | 89 | 87 |
| Female gender, n (%) | 41 (46) | 46 (54) |
| Location of residence, n (%) | ||
| Rural, n (%) | 85 (95.5) | 79 (90.8) |
| Town, n (%) | 2 (2.3) | 6 (6.9) |
| Unknown, n (%) | 2 (2.3) | 2 (2.3) |
| Maternal age in years | ||
| 16 to <22, n (%) | 30 (33.7) | 25 (28.7) |
| 22 to <36, n (%) | 53 (59.6) | 53 (60.9) |
| 36 to <45, n (%) | 6 (6.7) | 9 (10.3) |
| House construction | ||
| Non-ideal home | 81 (91.0) | 75 (86.2) |
| Ideal home | 6 (6.7) | 10 (11.5) |
| Unknown | 2 (2.3) | 2 (2.3) |
| Primary caregiver education | ||
| Primary school or less, n (%) | 69 (77.5) | 74 (85.1) |
| More than primary school, n (%) | 18 (20.2) | 11 (62.5) |
| Unknown, n (%) | 2 (2.3) | 2 (2.3) |
DHA/PQ dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine
Predictors of piperaquine (PQ) exposure
| N | Mean adherence score (SD) | Unadjusted P value | Adjusteda P value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 40 | 1.02 (0.64) | Ref | Ref |
| Female | 47 | 1.11 (0.76) | 0.55 | 0.57 |
| Location of residencea | ||||
| Rural | 79 | 1.04 (0.70) | Ref | Ref |
| Town | 6 | 1.13 (0.97) | 0.76 | 0.98 |
| Maternal age in years | ||||
| 16 to <22 | 25 | 1.02 (0.67) | Ref | Ref |
| 22 to <36 | 53 | 1.02 (0.72) | 0.99 | 0.98 |
| 36 to <45 | 9 | 1.46 (0.66) | 0.11 | 0.09 |
| House constructionb | ||||
| Non-ideal home | 75 | 1.01 (0.71) | Ref | Ref |
| Ideal home | 10 | 1.33 (0.65) | 0.18 | 0.23 |
| Primary caregiver educationb | ||||
| Primary school or less | 74 | 1.03 (0.71) | Ref | Ref |
| More than primary school | 11 | 1.11 (0.72) | 0.73 | 0.89 |
aAll covariates included in multivariate model
b2 children with unknown location of residence, housing construction, and primary caregiver education
Fig. 2Average piperaquine score and the incidence of malaria. The average incidence of malaria per child plotted against the average adherence score. Solid line best fit line of generated data with dotted line showing 95 % confidence intervals. R Spearman’s rank correlation
Protective efficacy of DHA/PQ when stratified by PQ exposure
| Treatment arm | PQ strataa | N | Number of cases | PYAR | Incidence of malaria | Univariate | Multivariateb | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PE (95 % CI) |
| PE (95 % CI) |
| ||||||
| No chemoprevention | – | 89 | 723 | 105.9 | 6.83 | – | – | – | – |
| Low | 40 | 242 | 50.7 | 4.77 | 31 % (5–50 %) | 0.023 | 31 % (6–49 %) | 0.017 | |
| Monthly DHA/PQ | Medium | 37 | 115 | 50.8 | 2.26 | 67 % (53–77 %) | <0.001 | 67 % (54–76 %) | <0.001 |
| High | 10 | 3 | 15.0 | 0.20 | 97 % (91–99 %) | <0.001 | 97 % (89–99 %) | <0.001 | |
DHA/PQ dihydroartemisinin/piperaquine, PYAR person years at risk, PE protective efficacy
aPQ strata based on average PQ exposure score [0 to <1 (“low”), 1 to <2 (“medium”), and >2 (“high”)]
bMultivariate model includes housing location, type, maternal age, and education level of primary care giver