| Literature DB >> 29566695 |
Kiran T Thakur1, Jimmy Vareta2, Kathryn A Carson3, Samuel Kampondeni4,5,6, Michael J Potchen4,5, Gretchen L Birbeck4,7, Ian MacCormick8,9,10, Terrie Taylor4,11, David J Sullivan12, Karl B Seydel4,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cerebral malaria (CM) causes a rapidly developing coma, and remains a major contributor to morbidity and mortality in malaria-endemic regions. This study sought to determine the relationship between cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) Plasmodium falciparum histidine rich protein-2 (PfHRP-2) and clinical, laboratory and radiographic features in a cohort of children with retinopathy-positive CM.Entities:
Keywords: Cerebrospinal fluid; Coma; Parasitic infections
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29566695 PMCID: PMC5865338 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-018-2272-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Flow-chart of inclusion and exclusion of patients in the study
Demographic and clinical characteristics
| Characteristic | Retinopathy-positive CM |
|---|---|
| Age (months) | 44 (29–62) |
| Male sex, n (%) | 53 (56.4) |
| HIV infected, n (%)a | 6 (7) |
| Glucose (mmol/L) | 6.2 (4.6–7.3) |
| Haematocrit (%)b | 20.5 (16.6–25.1) |
| White blood cell count (× 103 cells/µL)c | 8.5 (6.4–14.4) |
| Platelet count (× 103 cells/µL)d | 54 (31–80) |
| Lactate (mmol/L)e | 7.0 (3.2–11.6) |
| Peripheral parasitaemia (× 103 parasites/µL)b | 83.7 (24.5–284.5) |
| Brain volume score > 6, n (%)b | 13 (14) |
| In-hospital death, n (%) | 10 (11) |
Results presented are median (IQR) unless otherwise specified
aHIV testing in 85 patients
bn = 92
cn = 87
dn = 85
en = 93
Clinical and laboratory characteristics by survival
| Parameter | Survived | Died | p valuea | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # of patients | Median (IQR) | # of patients | Median (IQR) | ||
| Age (months) | 84 | 45 (28.5–61.5) | 10 | 40 (33–66) | 0.99 |
| Glucose (mmol/L) | 83 | 6.2 (4.6–7.3) | 10 | 5.9 (4.5–10.1) | 0.56 |
| Haematocrit (%) | 83 | 20.4 (16.1–24.6) | 9 | 24.3 (17.7–27.6) | 0.34 |
| White blood cell count (× 103 cells/µL) | 78 | 8.3 (6.4–12.9) | 9 | 11.0 (6.8–20.9) | 0.17 |
| Platelet count (× 103 cells/µL) | 76 | 54 (33–83) | 9 | 31 (20–66) | 0.23 |
| Lactate (mmol/L) | 82 | 5.9 (3.1–10.2) | 10 | 12.6 (8.1–14.9) | 0.005 |
| Peripheral parasitaemia (× 103 parasites/µL) | 83 | 95.9 (25.0–283.9) | 9 | 49.6 (22.0–554.2) | 0.83 |
| CSF PfHRP-2 (ng/mL) | 84 | 19.6 (4.0–48.0) | 10 | 54.6 (26.3–72.3) | 0.04 |
| Plasma PfHRP-2 (ng/mL) | 84 | 9565 (3639–17,890) | 10 | 15,597 (3880–19,172) | 0.47 |
IQR, interquartile range
ap values are from Wilcoxon rank-sum tests
Fig. 2Comparison of PfHRP2 levels in a plasma, b CSF, and c the CSF/Plasma ratio in patients with severely increased brain volume scores versus those with mild-moderate increased brain volume. Line represents median value, box extends from first quartile to third quartile, whiskers extend to 5th and 95th percentile, and asterisks represent data points outside this range
Differences in CSF PfHRP-2 and plasma PfHRP-2 levels by finding for 58 patients with brain magnetic resonance imaging
| Radiographic finding | N (%) positive | Plasma PfHRP-2, median (IQR) | CSF PfHRP-2, median (IQR) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive finding | Negative finding | p valuea | Positive finding | Negative finding | p valuea | ||
| Frontal–occipital lobe T2 hyperintensity | 6 (10) | 37.9 (13.7–65.7) | 24.3 (8.5–51.1) | 0.72 | 5782 (2602–21,100) | 12,906 (4820–22,569) | 0.35 |
| Periventricular T2 hyperintensity | 25 (43) | 15.2 (0.6–36.4) | 31.6 (14.8–65.3) | 0.03 | 11,000 (4258–17,510) | 15,094 (5573–28,084) | 0.17 |
| Periventricular DWI abnormality | 22 (38) | 17.7 (8.8–33.3) | 32.6 (8.1–64.8) | 0.25 | 9951 (3631–19,172) | 14,226 (5542–26,893) | 0.27 |
| Subcortical white matter T2 hyperintensity | 39 (67) | 24.7 (13.5–63.7) | 30.1 (2.8–48.1) | 0.90 | 11,000 (5294–21,100) | 16,099 (3968–26,906) | 0.80 |
| Cortical T2 hyperintensity | 47 (81) | 27.9 (9.9–48.2) | 14.2 (3.8–96.1) | 0.77 | 13,358 (5294–26,879) | 10,242 (3595–17,533) | 0.20 |
| Cortical DWI abnormality | 6 (10) | 5.0 (0–27.9) | 27.7 (13.6–64.0) | 0.06 | 14,754 (1678–28,084) | 11,847 (5403–20,136) | 0.69 |
| Caudate T2 hyperintensity | 41 (71) | 29.1 (13.5–64.3) | 15.2 (8.2–43.0) | 0.31 | 13,358 (5862–26,879) | 8147 (3968–17,533) | 0.13 |
| Caudate DWI abnormality | 4 (7) | 69.0 (18.5–212.0) | 24.3 (8.8–48.2) | 0.23 | 15,390 (11,047–26,981) | 11,184 (4274–22,110) | 0.51 |
| Globus pallidi T2 hyperintensity | 43 (74) | 30.1 (13.5–65.3) | 14.8 (6.2–35.1) | 0.11 | 15,094 (5863–26,906) | 5512 (3968–17,533 | 0.49 |
| Globus pallidi DWI abnormality | 13 (22) | 65.3 (26.3–92.7) | 19.2 (8.2–46.3) | 0.02 | 15,094 (11,000–36,540) | 10,470 (4258–21,100) | 0.09 |
| Putamen T2 hyperintensity | 42 (72) | 29.6 (13.5–64.3) | 15.0 (5.5–39.0) | 0.19 | 14,783 (5662–26,906) | 6830 (2830–16,816) | 0.04 |
| Putamen DWI abnormality | 7 (12) | 63.7 (13.7–101.6) | 23.8 (8.2–48.1) | 0.11 | 13,358 (10,242–36,540) | 11,128 (4258–22,110) | 0.28 |
| Thalamus T2 hyperintensity | 31 (53) | 26.3 (8.8–48.2) | 19.2 (8.2–65.7) | 0.99 | 13,358 (3902–26,906) | 11,000 (5512–17,732) | 0.61 |
| Corpus callosum T2 hyperintensity | 20 (34) | 22.4 (13.7–44.6) | 29.0 (2.8–64.3) | 0.85 | 13,852 (5434–21,605) | 11,847 (4258–26,906) | 0.921 |
| Corpus callosum DWI abnormality | 19 (33) | 24.7 (13.7–46.3) | 27.9 (2.8–64.3) | 0.86 | 17,462 (5573–23,028) | 11,240 (3968–18,048) | 0.49 |
| Posterior fossa T2 hyperintensity | 34 (59) | 30.3 (13.5–64.3) | 17.2 (4.5–47.9) | 0.29 | 17,486 (5992–28,084) | 8442 (4113–16,760) | 0.02 |
| Posterior fossa DWI abnormality | 4 (7) | 50.7 (4.4–207.6) | 25.5 (9.9–48.2) | 0.74 | 7526 (852–14,226) | 11,847 (5294–23,028) | 0.14 |
Fig. 3Comparison of PfHRP2 levels in a plasma, b CSF, and c the CSF/plasma ratio in patients who survived compared to those who died. Line represents median value, box extends from first quartile to third quartile, whiskers extend to 5th and 95th percentile, and asterisks represent data points outside this range
Multivariable logistic regression analysis for plasma PfHRP-2, CSF PfHRP-2, and CSF/plasma PfHRP-2 ratio and mortality
| Variablea | Plasma PfHRP-2 model | CSF PfHRP-2 model | CSF/plasma PfHRP-2 model | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Odds ratio (95% CI) | p value | Odds ratio (95% CI) | p value | Odds ratio (95% CI) | p value | |
| Age, 6 month increase | 1.08 (0.92–1.26) | 0.33 | 1.04 (0.88–1.24) | 0.63 | 1.05 (0.90–1.23) | 0.51 |
| Abnormal WBC vs normal | 3.29 (0.76–14.17) | 0.11 | 6.61 (1.05–41.73) | 0.04 | 2.94 (0.70–12.26) | 0.14 |
| Abnormal lactate vs normal | 11.74 (0.76–181.61) | 0.08 | 22.47 (1.07–470.35) | 0.04 | 12.66 (0.82–194.18) | 0.07 |
| High plasma PfHRP-2 vs low | 2.05 (0.45–9.35) | 0.35 | – | – | – | |
| High CSF PfHRP-2 vs low | – | – | 9.00 (1.44–56.42) | 0.02 | – | |
| High CSF/plasma PfHRP-2 vs low | – | – | – | – | 1.67 (0.35–7.88) | 0.52 |
CI confidence interval, WBC white blood count
aWhite blood cell count was coded abnormal if ≥ 10,000 cells/μL; lactate was coded abnormal if ≥ 5 mmol/L; PfHRP-2 measures were coded high if in the upper quartile (CSF > 65.309 ng/mL, ratio > 0.00945, plasma > 10,242 ng/mL) and low if less than the upper quartile. Similar results were obtained if these measures were continuous