| Literature DB >> 26581434 |
Stephanie Dellicour1, Meghna Desai2, George Aol3, Martina Oneko4, Peter Ouma5, Godfrey Bigogo6, Deron C Burton7, Robert F Breiman8, Mary J Hamel9, Laurence Slutsker10, Daniel Feikin11, Simon Kariuki12, Frank Odhiambo13, Jayesh Pandit14, Kayla F Laserson15, Greg Calip16, Andy Stergachis17, Feiko O ter Kuile18.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The artemisinin anti-malarials are widely deployed as artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT). However, they are not recommended for uncomplicated malaria during the first trimester because safety data from humans are scarce.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26581434 PMCID: PMC4652370 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-015-0950-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Description of drug information sources used to determine anti-malarial and malaria exposure status
| Approach | Format | Drug information available |
|---|---|---|
| EMEP self-report | Retrospective self-report of illness and medication used since the beginning of the pregnancy collected at every ANC visit and at pregnancy outcome follow-up visit. A general open question about any drug use as well as a directed question for specific anti-malarials were included as using medication/indication-specific questions have been shown to improve accuracy. Photographs of all anti-malarial drugs found in the study area were used to facilitate recognition of drug names. A calendar marking public holidays and school closures was also used to enhance recall of dates | Drug name |
| Lwak-OPD records | Prospective documentation by health facility clinic staff of diagnosis and treatment prescribed at outpatient department (OPD) whenever a PBIDS participant sought care at Lwak Hospital for an infectious syndrome | Date of visit |
| PBIDS weekly and twice-monthly home visits | Self-report of symptoms, health-seeking behaviour and medication. This information was collected continuously on a weekly (from 5 January, 2010 to 26 May, 2011) and then twice-monthly basis (27 May, 2011 onwards). The same visual aids as described above were used for recall of drug intake | Date of visit |
ANC antenatal care, EMEP evaluation of medications used in early pregnancy study, Lwak OPD Lwak hospital out-patient department, PBIDS population-based infectious disease surveillance
Fig. 1Study participant flow diagram from screening to inclusion in data analysis
Characteristics of 1134 pregnancies by ACT exposure status [n (%) otherwise stated]
| Overall (N = 1134) | No ACT exposure in the first trimester (N = 835) | Unconfirmed ACT exposure in the first trimester (N = 222) | Confirmed ACT exposure in the first trimester (N = 77) | P values* | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age in years [mean (SD; range)] | 26.1 (6.8; 15–47) | 26.1 (6.7; 15–45) | 26.7 (7.2; 15–47) | 25.2 (6.5; 16–41) | 0.225 |
| Gravidity | Missing n = 16 | Missing n = 14 | Missing n = 1 | Missing n = 1 | 0.065 |
| Primigravidae | 219 (19.6) | 151 (18.4) | 47 (21.3) | 21 (27.6) | |
| 1–3 pregnancies | 525 (47.0) | 405 (49.3) | 90 (40.7) | 30 (39.5) | |
| 4+ pregnancies | 374 (33.5) | 265 (32.3) | 84 (38.0) | 25 (32.9) | |
| Previous pregnancy loss | 160 (14.3), Missing n = 17 | 118 (14.4), Missing n = 15 | 30 (13.6), Missing n = 1 | 12 (15.8), Missing n = 1 | 0.888 |
| Gestational age at detection in weeks [mean (SD; range)]a | 13.3 (6.9; 0–27.9) | 13.3 (7.0; 0–27.9) | 13.0 (6.7; 0.3–27) | 13.6 (7.1; 2.4–27.4) | 0.770 |
| Occupation | Missing n = 31 | Missing n = 28 | Missing n = 1 | Missing n = 2 | 0.191 |
| Not working | 379 (34.4) | 281 (34.8) | 68 (30.8) | 30 (40.0) | |
| Farming | 369 (33.5) | 268 (33.2) | 80 (36.2) | 21 (28.0) | |
| Small business/Skilled Labour | 335 (30.4) | 246 (30.5) | 65 (29.4) | 24 (32.0) | |
| Other | 20 (1.8) | 12 (1.5) | 8 (3.6) | 0 | |
| Antenatal care summary | |||||
| Number of ANC visit | Missing n = 39 | Missing n = 31 | Missing n = 5 | Missing n = 3 | 0.125 |
| None | 89 (8.1) | 64 (8.0) | 21 (9.7) | 4 (5.4) | |
| 1 | 90 (8.2) | 61 (7.6) | 24 (11.1) | 5 (6.8) | |
| 2 | 155 (14.2) | 121 (15.1) | 25 (11.5) | 9 (12.2) | |
| 3 | 244 (22.3) | 193 (24.0) | 38 (17.5) | 13 (17.6) | |
| 4+ | 517 (47.2) | 365 (45.4) | 109 (50.2) | 43 (58.1) | |
| Gestational age at first ANC visit in weeks [mean (SD)]* | 20.8 (7.8) range: 1.7–41.0 | 21.24 (7.8) range: 2.7–41.0 | 19.7 (7.6) range: 1.7–41.0 | 19.4 (7.7) range: 3.4-37.0 | 0.020 |
| HIV positiveb | Missing n = 101 | Missing n = 79 | Missing n = 18 | Missing n = 4 | 0.354 |
| Negative | 771 (74.4) | 562 (74.3) | 149 (73.0) | 60 (82.2) | |
| Positive | 262 (25.4) | 194 (25.7) | 55 (27.0) | 13 (17.8) | |
ACT artemisinin combination therapy, SD standard deviation
* P values refer to Pearson Chi square test for categorical variables and ANOVA test for continuous variables
aGestational age lowest estimate include 0 which reflects inaccuracy in the gestational age measurements
bHIV status information was not available for 12 % (129) of pregnancies that did not attend antenatal care or have the antenatal card for review. HIV status information was complemented by HDSS and data which offered home-based HIV testing and counselling to PBIDS participants. Test results were linked to the study participants using unique ID and missing data were updated if the test was performed before the pregnancy detection for HIV positive test results and for HIV negative results if the test was performed maximum 3 months before or after pregnancy detection. An additional 30 HIV status were ascertained while 8 % (99) still had no HIV status data
Fig. 2Miscarriage rate, unadjusted and adjusted hazard rates for the association between different anti-malarial exposure categories and miscarriage