| Literature DB >> 31836735 |
Isabella Quakyi1,2, Bernard Tornyigah1,3, Pascal Houze4,5,6, Kwadwo A Kusi3, Nathaniel Coleman2, Guillaume Escriou1, Amos Laar2, Michel Cot1, Julius Fobil2, Gloria Quansah Asare2, Philippe Deloron1, Abraham K Anang6, Gilles Cottrell1, Michael F Ofori3, Nicaise Tuikue Ndam7,8.
Abstract
Despite the clinically proven advantages of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp) with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP), utilisation has been low in many African countries. To increase uptake and achieve the desired effect, the World Health Organization revised the policy to a monthly administration. Assessing the coverage and impact of the revised policy on pregnancy and neonatal outcomes is, therefore, a necessity. A 2-parallel cross-sectional hospital-based study was carried out among pregnant women attending first antenatal care (ANC) and delivery. Maternal and cord blood samples were assayed for malaria parasites by quantitative PCR targeting both the 18S rDNA and the acidic terminal segment of Plasmodium falciparum var genes, and plasma SP levels were measured by liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry. Parasite prevalence was similar between the two study sites but decreased significantly between the first ANC (9% or 43%) and delivery (4% or 11%) based on the qPCR target. At delivery, 64.5% of women received ≥3 IPTp-SP dose, 15.5% received 2 doses and 6% had 1 dose. Taking ≥3 IPTp-SP doses was associated with an average birth weight increase of more than 0.165 kg. IPTp-SP uptake was associated with plasma SP level at delivery (OR = 32.3, p ≤ 0.005, 95% CI (13.3;78.4) for those that reported ≥3 IPTp-SP doses) while the same trend of improved birth weight was observed with high plasma SP levels. The new IPTp policy is well implemented and well utilised by women in the sites considered in this study and translates to the improved birth weight observed. This study confirms the interest and the clinical benefit expected from this policy change.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31836735 PMCID: PMC6911095 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-55046-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Study population characteristics.
| Characteristics | 1st ANC visit | Delivery | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maamobi (n = 490) | Kpone on-Sea (n = 497) | Maamobi (n = 635) | Kpone on-Sea (n = 300) | |
| Age# | 27.28 ± 5.98 | 27.27 ± 5.83 | 28.13 ± 5.57 | 26.67 ± 5.32 |
| Single | 123 (25.2%) | 37 (7.4%) | 141 (22.2%) | 44 (14.7%) |
| Co-habiting | 46 (9.4%) | 141 (28.4%) | 22 (3.5%) | 67 (22.3%) |
| Married | 320 (65.4%) | 319 (64.2%) | 460 (72.4%) | 189 (63%) |
| None | 48 (9.9%) | 44 (8.9%) | 68 (10.7%) | 31 (10.3%) |
| Basic education | 285 (59.0%) | 337 (67.8%) | 249 (39.2%) | 197 (65.7%) |
| Middle education | 103 (21.3%) | 87 (17.5%) | 147 (23.2%) | 53 (17.7%) |
| Higer education | 47 (9.7%) | 29 (5.8%) | 62 (9.8%) | 19 (6.3%) |
| Yes | 389 (79.4%) | 375 (75.5%) | 496 (78.1%) | 232 (77.3%) |
| No | 101 (20.6%) | 122 (24.5%) | 138 (21.9%) | 68 (22.7%) |
| Primigravidae | 126 (25.7%) | 123 (24.7%) | 121 (19.1%) | 75 (25%) |
| By 18SqPCR | 16 (12.7%) | 13 (10.6%) | 5 (4.1%) | 2 (2.7%) |
| By ATSqPCR | 50 (39.7%) | 58 (47.1%) | 35 (28.9%) | 10 (13.3%) |
| Multigravidae | 364 (74.3%) | 374 (75.3%) | 513 (80.9%) | 225 (75%) |
| By 18SqPCR | 30 (8.2%) | 31 (8.3%) | 23 (4.5%) | 7 (3.1%) |
| By ATSqPCR | 159 (43.7%) | 156 (41.7%) | 45 (8.8%) | 16 (7.1%) |
| Gestational age at first ANC# | 18.4 ± 6.89 | 17.9 ± 7.13 | 18.9 ± 7.29 | 18.3 ± 6.95 |
| Yes | 293 (59.8%) | 214(43.1%) | 498 (78.4%) | 272 (90.7%) |
| No | 197 (40.2%) | 283 (56.9%) | 137 (21.6%) | 28 (9.3%) |
| Always | 93 (31.7%) | 141 (65.9%) | 187 (37.5%) | 141 (51.8%) |
| sometimes | 132 (45.1%) | 55 (25.7%) | 206 (41.4%) | 93 (34.2%) |
| Seldom | 68 (23.2%) | 18 (8.4%) | 105 (21.1%) | 38 (14.0%) |
| HBx | 10.76 ± 5.98 | 11.06 ± 5.83 | 10.86 ± 1.86 | 11.10 ± 1.12 |
| Severe anaemic (Hb <8.0 g/dL) | 25 (5.1%) | 17 (3.4%) | 44 (7.1%) | 1 (0.4%) |
| Anaemic (11.0< Hb ≥8.0 g/dL) | 229 (46.7%) | 198 (39.8%) | 263 (42.4%) | 126 (44.5%) |
| Peripheral | 17 (3.5%) | 19 (3.8%) | 15 (2.4%) | ND |
| Placenta | 2 (0.3%) | 0 (0%) | ||
| Defect | 82 (12.9%) | ND | ||
| Normal | 553 (87.1%) | |||
| Low birth weight <2500 g | 29 (4.6%) | 12 (4.0%) | ||
#Mean ± SD; †n (%); *p-value < 0.005; G6PD defect comprises partial and full deficit, ND not done.
P.falciparum prevalence among different sample types by both 18SqPCR and ATSqPCR.
| Characteristics | 1st ANC | Delivery | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maamobi (n = 490) | Kpone on-Sea (n = 497) | Maamobi (n = 634) | Kpone on-Sea (n = 300) | |
| By 18SqPCR | 46(9.4%) | 44(8.9%) | 28(4.4%) | 9(3.0%) |
| By ATSqPCR | 207(42.2%) | 214(43.1%) | 80(12.6%) | 26(8.7%) |
| By 18SqPCR | 21460 ± 42907 | 27484 ± 74382 | 27847 ± 130059 | 21943 ± 43029 |
| By 18SqPCR | 16(2.5%) | 5(1.7%) | ||
| by ATSqPCR | 44(6.9%) | 11(3.7%) | ||
*n (%); #Mean ± SD;
The concordance and discordance between infections detected targeting the 18 SqPCR and the ATS qPCR.
| 18SqPCR | ATS qPCR | Row total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | Negative | ||
| Positive | 134 | 1 | 135 |
| Negative | 432 | 2253 | 2685 |
| Column total | 566 | 2254 | 2820 |
Figure 1IPTP-SP coverage among delivery women in Maamobi (grey bars) and Kpone on-Sea (stripped bars).
Relationship between P. falciparum infections detected by ATSqRT-PCR and IPTp-SPa uptake using a multivariate logistic regression.
| Risk factor | Odds Ratio | 95% confidence interval | P value |
|---|---|---|---|
| <3 IPTp-SP uptake | Reference | ||
| ≥3 IPTp-SP uptake | 0.71 | (0.38; 1.32) | 0.29 |
| multigravidae | Reference | ||
| Primigravidae | 0.81 | (0.37; 1.78) | 0.6 |
| ≥3 IPTp-SP uptake | 0.72 | (0.36; 1.45) | 0.36 |
| Primigravidae | 0.71 | (0.27; 1.87) | 0.49 |
| ≥3 IPTp-SP uptake | 0.69 | (0.18; 2.70) | 0.59 |
| Primigravidae | 1.09 | (0.28; 4.26) | 0.9 |
acomparison of ≥3 IPTp-SP versus <3 doses taken; *Plasmodium falciparum.
Relationship between SP uptake and birth weight by multivariate linear regression.
| Coefficients (Kg) | 95% confidence interval | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| No SP uptake | Reference | ||
| 1 or 2 IPTp-SP uptakea | 0.072 | (−0.22; 0.37) | 0.63 |
| ≥3 IPTp-SP uptakeb | 0.201 | (−0.07; 0.48) | 0.15 |
| Primigravidae | −0.107 | (−0.23; 0.01) | 0.08 |
| 1 or 2 IPTp-SP uptake | 0.075 | (−0.03; 0.18) | 0.18 |
| ≥3 IPTp-SP uptake | 0.166 | (0.07; 0.26) | <0.005 |
| Primigravidae | −0.188 | (−0.28; −0.10) | <0.005 |
aSP uptake of less than 3 doses (1 or 2 SP uptake) reflecting the old IPTp policy recommendation; bSP uptake of 3 or more doses reflecting the 2012 recommendation.
Relationship between IPTp-SP uptake and residual SPa level measured in the blood at delivery.
| SP measurement | ORb | 95% confidence interval | P value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primigravidae | 0.67 | (0.32; 1.41) | 0.29 |
| 1 or 2 IPTp-SP doses* | 18.9 | (6.5; 54.6) | <0.0001 |
| ≥3 IPTp-sSP doses taken# | 32.3 | (13.3; 78.4) | <0.0001 |
| Site | 0.9 | (0.4; 1.8) | 0.8 |
asulfadoxine as a proxy for SP categorised into binary variables (either high or low SP level) base on the median; bOdds-Ratio, *Participants that reported to have received 1 or 2 SP doses, #Participants that reported to have received ≥3 SP doses. The reference classes are the multigravidae, the women who reported no dose of SP taken, and Maamobi site.