| Literature DB >> 29182619 |
Priyani Dharmawardena1, Chaturaka Rodrigo2,3, Kamini Mendis4, W M Kumudu T de A W Gunasekera1, Risintha Premaratne1, Pascal Ringwald5, Deepika Fernando6.
Abstract
After eliminating local malaria transmission and being certified as a malaria-free country, Sri Lanka is facing the challenge of imported malaria. At the same time, the country has the unique opportunity to be a case study for other countries in a similar situation by approaching this issue systematically, guided by evidence. This study demonstrates the importance of developing a mechanism to detect imported malaria and adopting an evidence-based approach to study the resistance of imported malaria to anti-malarial medicines. This is a prospective study of patients diagnosed with imported malaria in Sri Lanka and treated according to the national treatment guidelines, over 24 months (2015/2016). The clinical features, time to diagnosis, origin of the infection, infecting species, parasite density and the treatment given were recorded. All patients were followed up for 28 days, and in the case of Plasmodium vivax and P. ovale infections, the follow up period was extended to 12 months to establish treatment failures and relapses. Fifty nine uncomplicated and 15 severe imported malaria cases were reported in Sri Lanka during the study period. Most of these infections originated in either Sub-Saharan Africa or South and Southeast Asia. Having a P. vivax infection and low parasitic counts were significantly associated with relative diagnostic delay. One of the 14 uncomplicated P. falciparum patients and two of the 12 severe P. falciparum malaria patients who were followed up till day 28 had a late clinical failure. The others responded adequately to treatment both clinically and parasitologically. There was no treatment failure reported amongst any other species. This study, which is the first to assess the therapeutic response of imported malaria in Sri Lanka after elimination, demonstrates that the current antimalarial treatment policies and strategies in Sri Lanka have been effective against infections acquired overseas up until the end of year 2016.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29182619 PMCID: PMC5705151 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0188613
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Schematic representation of subgroups of participants, attrition and outcomes.
Baseline characteristics of the study population.
| Variable | Uncomplicated malaria(n = 59) | Severe malaria |
|---|---|---|
| Value ( | ||
| Male | 55 (93.2) | 14 (93.3) |
| Female | 4 (6.8) | 1 (6.7) |
| 35.5 (13–66) | 42.6 (27–60) | |
| 2283 (32–53040) | ||
| 1510 (32–53,040) | 138,423 (18,985–668,000) | |
| 2725 (60 to 49,655) | ||
| Sri Lankan | 39 (66) | 13 (87) |
| Foreigners | 20 (34) | 2 (13) |
| Asia | 35 (61.4) | 0 |
| Africa | 24 (40.6) | 15 (100) |
| 18 (30.5) | 15 (100) | |
| 32 (54.2) | ||
| 7 (11.9) | ||
| 1 (1.7) | ||
| 1 (1.7) | ||
Fig 2Probable country of origin of imported malaria infections in Sri Lanka (circled in red).
Distribution of patients among categories of severe malaria (n = 15).
| Variable | Number | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Impaired consciousness | 5 | 33.3 |
| Pulmonary oedema | 2 | 13.3 |
| Hyper-parasitaemia | 2 | 13.3 |
| Bleeding and acute kidney injury | 2 | 13.3 |
| Shock | 1 | 6.7 |
| Other including multiple manifestations | 3 | 20.1 |
Treatment outcomes for patients with uncomplicated malaria (n = 59) and severe malaria (n = 15).
| Outcome | Uncomplicated malaria (%) | Severe malaria (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Early treatment failure | 0 | 0 |
| Late clinical failure | 1/14 (7.1) | 2/12 (16.6) |
| Late parasitological failure | 0 | 0 |
| Adequate clinical and parasitological response | 41/42 (97.6) | 10/12 (83.3) |
*Only observed with P. falciparum infections
Fig 3Time to diagnosis categorized according Plasmodium species.
Fig 4Time from onset of symptoms to diagnosis according to parasite load at diagnosis.