| Literature DB >> 28284211 |
Mirjam Groger1,2, Hannah S Fischer1, Luzia Veletzky1,2, Albert Lalremruata3, Michael Ramharter4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite increased efforts to control and ultimately eradicate human malaria, Plasmodium ovale malaria is for the most part outside the focus of research or public health programmes. Importantly, the understanding of P. ovale-nowadays regarded as the two distinct species P. ovale wallikeri and P. ovale curtisi-largely stems from case reports and case series lacking study designs providing high quality evidence. Consecutively, there is a lack of systematic evaluation of the clinical presentation, appropriate treatment and relapse characteristics of P. ovale malaria. The aim of this systematic review is to provide a systematic appraisal of the current evidence for severe manifestations, relapse characteristics and treatment options for human P. ovale malaria. METHODS ANDEntities:
Keywords: Congenital Plasmodium ovale malaria; Plasmodium ovale; Relapse characteristics; Severe Plasmodium ovale malaria; Treatment evaluation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28284211 PMCID: PMC5346189 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-017-1759-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1PRISMA [13] adapted flow diagram
Baseline characteristics in prospective uncontrolled clinical trials
| Authors | No of | Age (years) | Sex | Patients’ status | Origin of infection |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Siswantoro et al. [ | 11 | 28 (median) | 8 M, 3 F | R | Indonesia |
| Same-Ekobo et al. [ | 30 | – | – | R | Cameroon |
| Ringwald et al. [ | 8 | 17 (median) | – | R | Cameroon |
| 2 | 8 (median) | – | R | Cameroon | |
| Radloff et al. [ | 3 | >10 years | – | R | Gabon |
| Danis et al. [ | 4 | 19–32 | – | T | Sub-Saharan Africa |
No number, M male, F female, R resident, T tourist, – not mentioned in the original publication
Treatment characteristics
| Authors | Diagnostics | Parasitaemia | Drug | Dosing (total) | Period | Adverse events | Mean FCT (h) | Mean PCT (h) | Cure | Last day of observation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Siswantoro et al. | MIC + PCR | 645 p/µl | Chloroquine | 25 mg/kg (+150 mg base) | Over 3 days | – | 24 | 48 | Y~ | 28 |
| Same-Ekobo et al. | MIC | 534,642 p/µl (total) | Artesunate | 600 mg | Over 5 days | Vertigo, non-severe transient decrease of reticulocytes in 1 participant | 36.6 | 38.8 | Y | 14 |
| Ringwald et al. | MIC | 2250–40,680 p/µl | Pyronaridine | 32 mg/kg | Over 3 days | Mild gastrointestinal disturbances, pruritus | 45 | 57 | Y | 14 |
| MIC | 6656–13,680 p/µl | Chloroquine | 25 mg/kg | Over 3 days | – | 24 | 60 | Y | 14 | |
| Radloff et al. | MIC | 700–5000 p/µl | Atovaquone/proguanil | 3000 mg/1200 mg | Over 3 days | – | – | 72–168 | Y | 28 |
| Danis et al. | – | – | Mefloquine | 0.5–1.25 mg | Once and twice | – | – | 72–120 | Y | – |
MIC microscopy, PCR polymerase chain reaction, Y yes, –not mentioned in the original publication, ~ adequate clinical and parasitological response of P. ovale at day 28, however, reappearing P. vivax in follow up period at days 14 and 23
Baseline characteristics of severely diseased P. ovale cases
| Authors, year of publication | Age | Sex | Patient status | Travel history | Chemoprophylaxis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tomar et al. [ | 75 | M | R | None, resident of India | NA |
| Lemmerer et al. [ | 29 | M | W | Democratic Republic of Congo | – |
| Strydom et al. [ | 42 | M | W | Guinea, Mozambique | None |
| Rojo-Marcos et al. [ | 17 | F | – | – | – |
| 31 | M | – | – | – | |
| Lau et al. [ | 59 | M | T | Nigeria | Mefloquine |
| Hachimi et al. [ | 31 | M | – | Democratic Republic of Congo | – |
| Lahlou et al. [ | 28 | M | W | Democratic Republic of Congo | – |
| Roze et al. [ | 24 | M | W | Chad, Ivory Coast | Doxycycline |
| Coton et al. [ | 33 | M | W | Djibouti | – |
| Haydoura et al. [ | 46 | F | B | NA | NA |
| Cinquetti [ | 34 | M | W | Ivory Coast, Senegal | Doxycycline |
| Rojo-Marcos et al. [ | 43 | M | V | Nigeria | None |
| Rubinstein et al. [ | 23 | M | – | Nigeria | – |
| Filler et al. [ | 39 | F | T | Cameroon, Botswana, Zimbabwe, South Africa | Yes, drug unknown |
| Lee et al. [ | 31 | F | T | Ghana | Mefloquine |
| Patel [ | 42 | M | T | Central and southern Africa | NA |
| Facer et al. [ | 51 | F | T | Ghana | None |
| Monlun, et al. [ | 38 | M | T | Niger | Chloroquine |
| Bock [ | 23 | – | W | Western Africa, Cameroon | Chinoplasmine |
| 20 | – | W | Western Africa, Cameroon | Quinine (irregular) | |
| Fairley [ | 28 | M | T | Nigeria, Ghana, Gambia, Sierra Leone | Quinine |
M male, F, female, T tourist, R resident, W work, B blood transfusion, V visiting friends or relatives, NA not applicable, – not mentioned in the original publication
Characteristics of severe P. ovale disease
| Authors | Diagnostics | Parasitaemia | Body temperature (°C) | Features of severity | Treatment | Concomitant medication | Outcome | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tomar et al. [ | MIC + PCR | – | 39 | Bilirubin >50 µm/l, creatinine >265 µm/l, systolic blood pressure <80 mmHg, hemoglobinuria | Artesunate iv | Ceftriaxone iv, antipyretics | Survival without sequelae | |
| Lemmerer et al. [ | MIC | – | 40.5 | Splenic rupture | Chloroquine, 2325 mg po over 2 days | – | Survival with sequelae | |
| Strydom et al. [ | MIC + PCR | 1.4% | 39.5 | Bilirubin >50 µm/l, systolic blood pressure <80 mmHg | Quinine, 600 mg iv eight hourly and doxycycline 100 mg twelve hourly | Ceftriaxone | Survival without sequelae | |
| Rojo-Marcos et al. [ | MIC + PCR (microscopy neg, PCR positive) | Nega | – | Hemoglobin <7 g/dla | – | – | Survival without sequelaea | |
| MIC + PCR (microscopy neg, PCR positive) | Nega | – | Hemoglobin <7 g/dla | – | – | Survival without sequelaea | ||
| Lau et al. [ | MIC + PCR | 0.18% | 40.8 | Creatinine >265 µm/l, acidosis, ARDS | Chloroquine 150 mg base for 2 days, quinine for 1 day and artesunate for 7 days | Ceftriaxone, piperacillin/tazobactam, vancomycin, imipenem, meropenem | Death | The first antibiotic was started on day 4 despite negative blood cultures; |
| Hachimi et al. [ | MIC | <0.2% | 39 | ARDS | Quinine | – | Death | History of tuberculosis 11 years ago |
| Lahlou et al. [ | MIC | 0.2% | – | ARDS | Quinine | Ciprofloxacin | Death | History of treated pulmonary tuberculosis 10 years ago |
| Roze et al. [ | MIC | 0.2% | – | ARDS | Chloroquine and quinine | – | Survival without sequelae | History of tuberous sclerosis and spontaneous pneumothorax |
| Coton et al. [ | MIC | – | 40 | Acute pericarditis | Chloroquine 30 mg/kg over 6 days | Ketoprophen, omeprazol, aspirin | Survival without sequelae | |
| Haydoura et al. [ | MIC | 1.1% | 40 | Oxygen saturation <92%, ARDS | Quinine iv for 7 days and doxycycline po for 7 days | Warfarin | Survival without sequelae | History of MTHFR, secondary portal vein thrombosis and severe lower gastrointestinal bleeding from hemorrhoids requiring 7 units of red blood cells |
| Cinquetti [ | MIC + PCR | 0.001% | 39.5 | Splenic infarction | Quinine 8 mg/kg iv three times daily | – | Survival with sequelae | |
| Rojo-Marcos et al. [ | MIC + PCR | 6000 trophozoites + gametocytes/µl | 40.5 | ARDS | Chloroquine for 3 days | – | Survival without sequelae | History of diabetes mellitus and hypertension; incomplete left bundle block in the predose ECG followed by left ventricular hypertrophy in the day 30 ECG; presence of Mansonella perstans; nosocomial Acinetobacter baumanii in broncho-alveolar aspirate |
| Rubinstein et al. [ | MIC | 0.2% | – | Bilirubin >50 µm/l | Quinine for 7 days and doxycycline for 7 days | – | Survival without sequelae | |
| Filler et al. [ | MIC | – | – | Hemoglobin <7 g/dl, splenic rupture, cardiac arrest | Quinine sulfate and doxycycline, followed by quinidine iv | – | Death | History notably of MS |
| Lee et al. [ | MIC | 0.1% | 39 | Oxygen saturation <92%, pulmonary edema | Chloroquine | – | Survival without sequelae | Negative blood cultures |
| Patel [ | MIC | – | – | Splenic rupture | Chloroquine | – | Survival with sequelae | |
| Facer et al. [ | MIC | 1.8% | NA | Splenic rupture | NA | NA | Death | Diagnosis post mortem; absence of |
| Monlun et al. [ | MIC | – | 41 | Cardiomyopathy | Chloroquine 500 mg/day for 5 days | – | Survival without sequelae | Cardiomyopathy resolved without additional specific treatment |
| Bock [ | MIC | – | – | Hemoglobin <7 g/dl | Mepacrine | – | Survival without sequelae | Case 2 |
| MIC | – | 40 | Cardiac arrhythmia | Mepacrine | – | Survival without sequelae | Case 15 | |
| Fairley [ | MIC | – | 38.3 | Hemoglobinuria | Mepacrine 0.1 g three times daily for 6 days and quinine bihydrochloride 7.5 g/day iv for 5 days | Saline | Survival without sequelae |
MIC microscopy, PCR polymerase chain reaction, po per os, iv intravenous, NA not applicable, ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome, MTHFR methylentetrahydrofolate reductase defect, MS multiple sclerosis, – not mentioned in the original publication
aInformation provided by the author
Characteristics of severe congenital malaria
| Authors, year of publication | Sex | Birth weight (kg) | Previous residence of mother | Country of birth | Diagnostics | Parasitaemia | Body temperature (°C) | Hemoglobin level (g/dl) | Treatment | Outcome | Concomitant medication | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Penazzato et al. [ | – | 3.13 | Nigeria | Italy | MIC + PCR | 0.01% | – | 5.4 | Quinine sulphate 20 mg/kg/d for 5 days | Recovered without sequelae | Zidovudine | Mother HIV positive, no materno-foetal transmission of HIV |
| Jenkins et al. [ | M | 4 | East Africa | England | MIC | – | 40 | 6.8 | Proguanil 0.25 g daily for 5 days followed by: chloroquine sulphate ¼ tablet twice daily for 2 days, then ¼ tablet daily for 2 days, then ¼ tablet weekly for 3 weeks | Recovered without sequelae | Penicillin, potassium permanganate baths, local aqueous gentian violet 0.66% | Pubic rash after day 3 |
| Erythromycin | Given on suspicion with proguanil | |||||||||||
| Ferrous sulphate |
MIC microscopy, PCR polymerase chain reaction, M male, – not mentioned in the original publication
Baseline characteristics of potentially relapsing patients
| Authors, year of publication | Patient’s status | Age (years) | Sex | Probable origin of infection | Chemoprophylaxis | Parasitaemia (parasites/µl) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bottieau [ | T | 17 | M | Ghana | Mefloquine | – |
| T | 22 | M | Nigeria | Mefloquine | – | |
| T | 14 | M | Uganda | None | – | |
| Collins et al. [ | I | – | – | NA | NA | 3780 |
| I | – | – | NA | NA | 2220 | |
| I | – | – | NA | NA | 8560 | |
| I | – | – | NA | NA | 9810 | |
| I | – | – | NA | NA | 5376 | |
| Nathwani et al. [ | T | 24 | M | Papua New Guinea | Chloroquine, pyrimethamine | – |
| Chin et al. [ | E | – | M | NA | NA | – |
| E | – | M | NA | NA | – | |
| E | – | M | NA | NA | – | |
| E | – | M | NA | NA | – | |
| E | – | M | NA | NA | – | |
| Garnham et al. [ | I | – | – | NA | NA | – |
| I | – | – | NA | NA | – | |
| Jeffery [ | I | – | – | NA | NA | – |
| I | – | – | NA | NA | – |
T tourist, E sporozoite induced experimental infection, I malaria infection therapy in neurosyphilis patients, M male, F female, NA not applicable, – not mentioned in the original publication
Relapse characteristics
| Authors | Diagnostic method primary infection | Treatment primary infection | Dosage primary infection | PQ therapy primary infection? | Time between primary infection and 1st relapse (weeks) | Diagnostic method 1st relapse | Treatment 1st relapse | PQ therapy 1st relapse? | Time between 1st and 2nd relapse (weeks) | Diagnostic method 2nd relapse | Treatment 2nd relapse | PQ therapy 2nd relapse? | Time between 2nd and 3rd relapse (weeks) | Treatment 3rd relapse |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bottieau [ | MIC | Quinine | 1.5 g/day for 5 days | Y, “standard regimen” (presumably 15 mg/day for 14 days) | 7 | MIC | Chloroquine 1.5 g over 3 days | Y, 7 mg/kg over 3 weeks | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Doxycycline | 100 mg/day for 7 days | |||||||||||||
| – | Quinine–doxycycline | – | Y, “standard regimen” | 2 | – | Chloroquine, dosage unknown | Y, 10 mg/kg over 4 weeks | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| – | Chloroquine | – | N | 60 | – | Atovaquone–proguanil, dosage unknown | Y, 5 mg/kg over 6 weeks | 78 | MIC | Atovaquone–proguanil, then chloroquine | Y, 8 mg/kg over 3 weeks | NA | NA | |
| Collins et al. [ | MIC | Chloroquine | 1.5 g over 3 days | N | 22 | MIC | Chloroquine, dosage unknown | N | 17 | MIC | Chloroquine, dosage unknown | – | NA | NA |
| MIC | Chloroquine | 1.5 g over 3 days | N | 10 | MIC | – | – | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| MIC | Chloroquine | 1.5 g over 3 days | N | 15 | MIC | – | – | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| MIC | Chloroquine | 1.5 g over 3 days | N | 24 | MIC | – | – | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| MIC | Chloroquine | 1.5 g over 3 days | N | 20 | MIC | – | – | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| Nathwani et al. [ | MIC | Chloroquine | 15 mg/day for 14 days | Y, 15 mg/day for 14 days | 17 | MIC | Chloroquine 1.5 g over 3 days | Y, 30 mg/day for 21 days | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Chin et al. [ | MIC | Quinine sulphate | 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days | N | – | MIC | Quinine sulphate 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days | N | 5 | MIC | Quinine sulphate 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days | N | – | Quinine sulphate 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days |
| MIC | Quinine sulphate | 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days | N | 2 | MIC | Quinine sulphate 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days | N | 20 | MIC | Quinine sulphate 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days | N | NA | NA | |
| MIC | Quinine sulphate | 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days | N | 36 | MIC | Quinine sulphate 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days | N | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| MIC | Quinine sulphate | 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days | N | – | MIC | Quinine sulphate 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days | N | – | MIC | Quinine sulphate 650 mg 8-hourly for 5 days | N | NA | NA | |
| MIC | Chloroquine | 600 mg single dose | N | – | MIC | Chloroquine 600 mg single dose | N | – | MIC | Chloroquine 600 mg single dose | Y, 15 mg/day for 14 days | NA | NA | |
| Garnham et al. [ | MIC | Chloroquine | – | N | 15 | MIC | No treatment | N | 10 | MIC | No treatment | N | NA | NA |
| MIC | Chloroquine | – | N | 14 | MIC | No treatment | N | 14 | MIC | No treatment | N | NA | NA | |
| Jeffery [ | MIC | Chloroquine | – | N | 21 | MIC | Chloroquine, dosage unknown | N | 22a | MIC | – | – | NA | NA |
| MIC | chloroquine | – | N | 34 | MIC | chloroquine, dosage unknown | Y, dosage unknown | NAa | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
MIC microscopy, Y yes, N no, NA not applicable, – not mentioned in the original publication
aThe patient who did not receive primaquine treatment for his 1st relapse developed a second one, however it was not clear from the article, which one of the two patients developed the described second relapse