| Literature DB >> 28003287 |
Holger W Unger1,2, Jordan E Cates3, Julie Gutman4, Valerie Briand5,6, Nadine Fievet5,6, Innocent Valea7,8, Halidou Tinto7,8, Umberto d'Alessandro9,10,11, Sarah H Landis12, Seth Adu-Afarwuah13, Kathryn G Dewey14, Feiko Ter Kuile15, Stephanie Dellicour15, Peter Ouma16, Laurence Slutsker4, Dianne J Terlouw17, Simon Kariuki16, John Ayisi16, Bernard Nahlen18, Meghna Desai4, Mwayi Madanitsa19, Linda Kalilani-Phiri15,19, Per Ashorn20,21, Kenneth Maleta19, Ivo Mueller22, Danielle Stanisic23, Christentze Schmiegelow24, John Lusingu24,25, Daniel Westreich3, Anna Maria van Eijk15, Steven Meshnick3, Stephen Rogerson2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The Maternal Malaria and Malnutrition (M3) initiative has pooled together 13 studies with the hope of improving understanding of malaria-nutrition interactions during pregnancy and to foster collaboration between nutritionists and malariologists. PARTICIPANTS: Data were pooled on 14 635 singleton, live birth pregnancies from women who had participated in 1 of 13 pregnancy studies. The 13 studies cover 8 countries in Africa and Papua New Guinea in the Western Pacific conducted from 1996 to 2015. FINDINGS TO DATE: Data are available at the time of antenatal enrolment of women into their respective parent study and at delivery. The data set comprises essential data such as malaria infection status, anthropometric assessments of maternal nutritional status, presence of anaemia and birth weight, as well as additional variables such gestational age at delivery for a subset of women. Participating studies are described in detail with regard to setting and primary outcome measures, and summarised data are available from each contributing cohort. FUTURE PLANS: This pooled birth cohort is the largest pregnancy data set to date to permit a more definite evaluation of the impact of plausible interactions between poor nutritional status and malaria infection in pregnant women on fetal growth and gestational length. Given the current comparative lack of large pregnancy cohorts in malaria-endemic settings, compilation of suitable pregnancy cohorts is likely to provide adequate statistical power to assess malaria-nutrition interactions, and could point towards settings where such interactions are most relevant. The M3 cohort may thus help to identify pregnant women at high risk of adverse outcomes who may benefit from tailored intensive antenatal care including nutritional supplements and alternative or intensified malaria prevention regimens, and the settings in which these interventions would be most effective. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/.Entities:
Keywords: malaria; malnutrition; pregnancy
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28003287 PMCID: PMC5223676 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012697
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Characteristics of the 13 individual studies included in the M3 initiative
| Countries | Study name | Design | Period | Median GA (IQR)* | Malaria prevention† | Nutritional intervention | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benin | STOPPAM I | Cohort | 2008–2010 | 17 (14–20) | IPT-SP | None | 1037 | 791 |
| BF | FSP/MISAME | RCT | 2006–2008 | 16 (11–21) | IPT-SP(2), IPT-SP(3) | MMS, FFS | 1296 | 1020 |
| DRC | ECHO | Cohort | 2005–2006 | 19 (17–21) | IPT-SP | None | 182 | 164 |
| Ghana | iLiNS-DYAD | RCT | 2009–2012 | 17 (15–20) | IPT-SP | LNS, MMN, IFA | 1320 | 1068 |
| Kenya | EMEP and IPTp-MON | Cohort ¶ | 2011–2013 | 23 (16–30) | IPTp-SP | None | 1453 | 473¶ |
| Kenya | ITN | RCT | 1996–1999 | 24 (20–30) | IPT-SP started during study | None | 911 | 711 |
| Kenya | Kisumu cohort | Cohort | 1996–2001 | 36 (34–37) | IPT-SP started during study | None | 3155 | 3388** |
| Kenya | STOPMIP | RCT | 2012–2015 | 23 (20–26) | IPT-SP, IPT-DHA-PQ, IST-DHA-PQ | None | 1546 | 1203 |
| Malawi | ISTp | RCT | 2011–2013 | 21 (19–23) | IPT-SP, IST-DP | None | 1873 | 1602 |
| Malawi | LAIS | RCT | 2003–2006 | 20 (18–23) | IPT-SP(2), IPT-SP(4) IPT-SPAZ | None | 1320 | 1190 |
| PNG | IPTp study | RCT | 2009–2013 | 22 (19–25) | IPT-SPAZ; Single dose SP and CQ | None | 2793 | 1943 |
| PNG | Sek cohort | Cohort | 2005–2007 | 25 (22–28) | Single dose SP and weekly CQ | None | 470 | 293 |
| Tanzania | STOPPAM II | Cohort | 2008–2010 | 19 (15–21) | IPT-SP | None | 995 | 789 |
*Median (IQR): gestational age at enrolment assessed by fetal biometry, or symphysis-pubis fundal height when ultrasound unavailable.
†If RCT, describes the intervention, if cohort, describes the national policy during the study period.
‡N, enrolled in parent study.
§n, live birth pregnancies that met inclusion criteria for M3.
¶The EMEP study was a prospective cohort study with some overlapping enrolment with the cross-sectional study IPTp-MON. One hundred and eleven pregnancies were enrolled in EMEP and IPTp-MON; information on malaria infection at delivery was obtained for the subset of women in IPTp-MON.
**Includes additional women from a substudy not included in the parent study which otherwise met inclusion criteria for the pooled data.
BF, Burkina Faso; CQ, chloroquine; DHA-PQ, dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine; DRC, Democratic Republic of the Congo; FFS, fortified food supplementation; IFA, iron and folic acid supplementation; IPTp, intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy; IST, intermittent screening for malaria infection; ISTp, intermittent screening for malaria infection in pregnancy; ITN, insecticide-treated bed net; LNS, lipid-based nutrient supplementation; M3, Maternal Malnutrition and Malaria; MMS, multiple micronutrients supplementation; PNG, Papua New Guinea; RCT, randomised controlled trial; SP, sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine; SPAZ, SP and azithromycin; STOPPAM, Strategies To Prevent Pregnancy Associated Malaria.
Figure 1Geographical locations where the 13 parent studies were conducted: Benin, Burkina Faso, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Papua New Guinea and Tanzania.
Key measures at enrolment across the 13 studies included in the M3 initiative
Available information indicated with X, missing data >10% indicated by *, and systematically missing data indicated with grey highlighting.
†The STOPPAM Benin and Tanzania studies primarily used the Parascreen RDT (Zephyr Biomedical Systems, Goa, India), which detects Plasmodium falciparum HRP-2 and pLDH.
‡The iLiNS-DYAD-Ghana study used the Clearview Malaria Combo RDT (British Biocell International, Dundee, UK), which detects HRP-2 and plasmodium aldolase.
§Women randomised to the ISTp arms of the STOPMIP-Kenya and ISTp-Malawi studies were tested with a First Response Malaria Ag. (pLDH/HRP2) Combo RDT (Premier Medical Corporation, India).
¶Maternal MUAC measured at delivery.
**Nine studies measured haemoglobin using a HemoCue haemoglobinometer (Hemocue, Angelholm, Sweden),20–22 26–31 one study relied on haemoglobin measures from a local laboratory (unknown make),23 one study used Sysmex hematological analyser (Kobe, Japan)32 and one study collected capillary blood (finger stick) specimens for determination of haematocrit or haemoglobin levels using a standardised chart.10 In the ITN-Kenya study, haemoglobin was measured using a HemoCue haemoglobinometer (Hemocue, Angelholm, Sweden) before 1997, and from 1997 onwards capillary blood (finger stick) specimens were collected for determination of haematocrit levels, which were divided by a factor of three and presented as haemoglobin values for consistency with the 1996 data.
BF, Burkina Faso; DRC, Democratic Republic of the Congo; HRP-2, histidine protein-2; IPTp, intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy; ISTp, intermittent screening for malaria infection in pregnancy; ITN, insecticide-treated bed nets; LM, light microscopy; M3, Maternal Malnutrition and Malaria; MUAC, mid-upper arm circumference; N, no; pLDH, Plasmodium lactate dehydrogenase; PNG, Papua New Guinea; RDT, rapid diagnostic test; STOPPAM, Strategies To Prevent Pregnancy Associated Malaria; Y, yes.
Key measures at delivery across the 13 studies included in the M3 Initiative
Available information indicated with X, missing data >10% indicated by *, and systematically missing data indicated with grey highlighting.
†For the EMEP/IPTp-MON study, only women co-enrolled in the IPTp-MON study (n=111) had malaria diagnostics at delivery.
BF, Burkina Faso; DRC, Democratic Republic of the Congo; IPTp, intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy; ISTp, intermittent screening for malaria infection in pregnancy; ITN, insecticide-treated bed nets; LM, light microscopy; M3, Maternal Malnutrition and Malaria; PNG, Papua New Guinea; STOPPAM, Strategies To Prevent Pregnancy Associated Malaria.