| Literature DB >> 32098634 |
Michael T Bretscher1, Prabin Dahal2,3, Jamie Griffin4, Kasia Stepniewska2,3, Quique Bassat5,6,7,8,9, Elisabeth Baudin10, Umberto D'Alessandro11, Abdoulaye A Djimde12, Grant Dorsey13, Emmanuelle Espié10,14, Bakary Fofana12, Raquel González5,6, Elizabeth Juma15, Corine Karema16,17, Estrella Lasry18, Bertrand Lell19,20, Nines Lima21, Clara Menéndez5,6, Ghyslain Mombo-Ngoma20,22,23, Clarissa Moreira2,3, Frederic Nikiema24, Jean B Ouédraogo24, Sarah G Staedke25, Halidou Tinto26, Innocent Valea26, Adoke Yeka27, Azra C Ghani28, Philippe J Guerin2,3, Lucy C Okell29.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The majority of Plasmodium falciparum malaria cases in Africa are treated with the artemisinin combination therapies artemether-lumefantrine (AL) and artesunate-amodiaquine (AS-AQ), with amodiaquine being also widely used as part of seasonal malaria chemoprevention programs combined with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine. While artemisinin derivatives have a short half-life, lumefantrine and amodiaquine may give rise to differing durations of post-treatment prophylaxis, an important additional benefit to patients in higher transmission areas.Entities:
Keywords: Amodiaquine; Artemisinin; Crt; Drug; Lumefantrine; Malaria; Mathematical model; Trial; mdr1
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32098634 PMCID: PMC7043031 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-020-1494-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Clinical trials included in the analysis and fitted parameters for each trial. The study sites are shown in order of increasing transmission intensity, as estimated by the hidden semi-Markov model analysis. Prior EIRs are estimated from the Malaria Atlas Project slide prevalence for each location in the year of the trial [28, 29]
| Site and reference | Country, year | PCR correction: molecular markers | AS-AQ manufacturer (formulation), target AQ dose* | Days of prophylaxis: posterior median (95% CI) | EIR | FOI† | Prevalence of | Prevalence of | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AL | AS-AQ | Prior mean | Posterior median (95% CI) | ||||||||
| Fougamou [ | Gabon, 2007–2008 | 68/68 | Sanofi-Aventis (FDC Coarsucam) 30 mg/kg | 11.6 (6.0–16.8) | 13.1 (7.6–18.6) | 0.6 | 2.3 (1.1–4.2) | 0.5 | 79.5 [ | 97.9 [ | |
| Ndola [ | Zambia, 2007–2009 | 69/64 | Sanofi-Aventis (FDC Coarsucam) 30 mg/kg | 10.8 (6.0–14.8) | 16.1 (9.7–25.0) | 1.2 | 4.8 (2.4–8.4) | 1.0 | No matching survey | 20.8 [ | |
| Pweto [ | Democratic Republic of Congo 2008-2009 | 126/129 | Sanofi-Aventis (AS-AQ Winthrop FDC) 30 mg/kg | 11.3 (7.8–14.4) | 17.9 (12.1–25.6) | 50.0 | 9.3 (6.2–13.7) | 2.0 | No matching survey | No matching survey | |
| Pamol [ | Nigeria, 2007–2008 | 164/159 | Sanofi-Aventis (FDC Coarsucam) 30 mg/kg | 17.9 (12.3–22.5) | 15.4 (10.3–21.7) | 22.6 | 9.5 (4.7–21.6) | 2.2 | 61.8 [ | 90.1 [ | |
| Bobo Dioulasso (unpublished‡) | Burkina Faso, 2010–2012 | 373/372 | Sanofi-Aventis (FDC Coarsucam) 30 mg/kg | 12.5 (10.6–14.4) | 16.9 (14.0–19.9) | 21.5 | 17.4 (13.3–23.1) | 5.9 | 18.0 [ | 28.5 [ | |
| Gourcy (unpublished‡) | Burkina Faso, 2010–2012 | 112/129 | Sanofi-Aventis (FDC Coarsucam) 30 mg/kg | 8.7 (6.2–10.9) | 17.8 (13.7–22.1) | 22.9 | 23.3 (15.9–33.7) | 6.5 | 18.0 [ | 24.8 [ | |
| Kisumu (unpublished‡) | Kenya, 2005 | 179/178 | Sanofi and Hoechst Marion Roussel (Loose NFDC) 30 mg/kg | 18.6 (15.8–21.2) | 14.2 (10.9–17.6) | 6.9 | 26.5 (18.1–39.6) | 5.7 | 66.6 [ | 90.3 [ | |
| Nimba [ | Liberia, 2008–2009 | 127/141 | Sanofi-Aventis (AS-AQ Winthrop FDC) 30 mg/kg | 17.9 (15.1–20.6) | 11.6 (8.8–14.3) | 18.3 | 32.4 (26.1–40.0) | 8.0 | 69.4 [ | 93.5 [ | |
| Sikasso [ | Mali 2005-2007 | 236/233 | Sanofi-Aventis (Coblistered NFDC. Arsucam) 30 mg/kg | 10.2 (9.0–11.6) | 18.7 (16.1–21.5) | 25.2 | 37.2 (29.5–46.9) | 11.3 | 35.5 [ | 70.2 [ | |
| Tororo [ | Uganda, 2009–2010 | 190/190 | Sanofi (AS-AQ Winthrop FDC) 30 mg/kg | 13.3 (11.8–14.6) | 13.4 (11.7–15.1) | 23.3 | 84.2 (72.9–96.9) | 16.9 | 63.9 [ | 99.6 [ | |
| Nanoro [ | Burkina Faso, 2007–2008 | 257/273 | Sanofi-Aventis (FDC Coarsucam) 30 mg/kg | 10.1 (9.2–11.1) | 17.0 (15.0–19.2) | 52.2 | 91.9 (76.2–111.1) | 18.9 | 31.6 [ | 67.0 [ | |
| Tororo [ | Uganda, 2005 | 189/195 | AQ: Parke-David, Pfizer, AS: Sanofi-Aventis (Loose NFDC) 25 mg/kg | 12.4 (11.1–13.8) | 10.2 (8.9–11.6) | 64.6 | 117.1 (98.4–139.8) | 23.3 | 79.4 [ | 96.2 [ | |
*FDC fixed-dose combination, NFDC non-fixed-dose combination. AS-AQ FDC was from Sanofi. For AL, all trials used the Novartis fixed-dose combination and the same dose regimen
†FOI force of infection, estimated mean incidence of patent blood-stage infection in this trial population, given the age distribution and fitted EIR
‡ Unpublished study references: Bobo Dioulasso, Gourcy: Nikiema F, Zongo I, Some F, Ouedraogo J. Evolution of therapeutic efficacies of artemisinin-based combination therapies (ASAQ and AL) for treatment of uncomplicated falciparum malaria in Burkina Faso during five years of adoption as first-line treatments, unpublished. and Kisumu: Juma EA. Efficacy of co-administered amodiaquine plus artesunate and artemether/lumefantrine for the treatment of uncomplicated falciparum malaria in children less than five years in different epidemiological settings in Kenya, unpublished.
Fig. 5Duration of prophylaxis and impact on clinical incidence in under 5-year-old children of using AS-AQ rather than AL as first-line treatment, estimated by the transmission model analysis, contrasting areas with low (a–c) or high (d–f) pfmdr1 86Y and pfcrt 76T prevalence. a The estimated proportion of individuals protected over time since treatment by AL or AS-AQ in Gourcy, Burkina Faso, where 86Y and 76T prevalences are low (18% and 25%, respectively) and amodiaquine provides longer chemoprophylaxis than lumefantrine or d Nimba, Liberia, where 86Y and 76T prevalences are high (69% and 95%, respectively) and the prophylactic times are reversed so that lumefantrine provides longer chemoprophylaxis than amodiaquine. b, c The model-estimated impact in children aged 0–5 years of using AS-AQ rather than AL as first-line treatment in the whole population, using the prophylactic profiles in a. The outcomes are b the difference and c the % difference in the cumulative number of clinical episodes occurring during the 5 years after implementing either drug at 80% coverage; here AS-AQ is predicted to decrease clinical incidence compared with AL. Orange bars show the impact in non-seasonal settings, while red shows the impact in a seasonal setting (see “Methods”). e, f The corresponding results using the prophylactic profiles in d; here AS-AQ is predicted to increase clinical incidence compared with AL
Fig. 1Duration of post-treatment prophylaxis. Posterior estimates of the median duration of protection (a) and the proportion of the population still having drug levels which would protect them from reinfection, over time since first dose with either AS-AQ (b) or AL (c). In b and c, the solid lines show the median estimate across trial sites, while the dotted lines show the different estimates for each of the 12 trial sites. The equations of the lines in b and c are reverse cumulative gamma distributions and can be implemented for example in R as 1-pgamma(t, shape = r, scale = λ), where t is time in days, and r and λ are the shape and scale parameters of the gamma distribution, respectively. For AL, r = 93.5 and mean λ = 0.139. For AS-AQ, r = 16.8 and mean λ = 0.906. The mean of each gamma distribution rλ gives the duration of protection from each drug. The site-specific lines can be calculated using the median durations of prophylaxis in Table 1, and the same shape parameter (assumed not to vary between sites for each drug)
Fig. 2Time to reinfection after treatment and model fits. Proportion of patients reinfected (after PCR correction) during follow-up after treatment at day 0 with AL (blue) or AS-AQ (green) in each of the 12 trial sites. Circles show data with 95% CI, and the lines are the fits of the hidden semi-Markov model in each site. The AL trial arms include in total 2086 individuals and 642 reinfections and the AS-AQ trial arms, 2128 individuals and 538 reinfections
Fig. 3Trial-specific EIR estimates. Prior and posterior estimates of the EIR at each trial site. The prior predictions are based on Malaria Atlas Project data [28]
Risk factors for reinfection: analysis adjusted for EIR only. Data from 2130 individuals in the AS-AQ trial arms and 2090 in the AL trial arms were analyzed using accelerated failure-time analysis. Regression coefficients are the ratio of time to reinfection, such that a coefficient > 1 indicates a longer time to reinfection. All results are adjusted for log EIR. Site-level random effects were included unless otherwise indicated. Models assume a lognormal time to reinfection
| Covariate (unit) | Analysis adjusted for EIR only | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Coefficient [ratio of reinfection times] (95% CI) | |||
| Loge EIR (annual bites per person) | 4220 | 0.79 (0.74, 0.85) | < 0.001 |
| AL | 2090 | 1 (ref) | |
| AS-AQ (overall) | 2130 | 1.09 (1.05, 1.13) | < 0.001 |
| AS-AQ (20% 86Y)* | 1934 | 1.37 (1.28, 1.47) | < 0.001 |
| AS-AQ (80% 86Y)* | 1934 | 0.89 (0.84, 0.94) | < 0.001 |
| Age (polynomial, years, > 20 grouped together) | 4213 | < 0.001 | |
| age | 0.94 (0.90, 0.98) | ||
| (age)2 | 1.01 (1.00, 1.02) | ||
| (age)3 | 0.9998 (0.9994, 1.0001) | ||
| Male gender | 3861 | 0.98 (0.95, 1.02) | 0.438 |
| Anemic (hb < 10 g/dl) | 3747 | 0.98 (0.93, 1.02) | 0.277 |
| Enlarged spleen† (yes/no) | 1390 | 1.00 (0.87, 1.15) | 0.999 |
| Presence of fever (> 37.5 °C) | 4220 | 0.97 (0.93, 1.01) | 0.146 |
| Underweight (weight-for-age Z score < −2) | 3193 | 0.98 (0.93, 1.04) | 0.613 |
| AQ dose (per 10 mg per kg increase) (AS-AQ arms only) | 1839 | 1.00 (0.95, 1.06) | 0.880 |
| Lumefantrine dose (per 10 mg per kg increase) (AL arms only) | 1850 | 1.02 (1.00, 1.04) | 0.015 |
| AS-AQ formulation | |||
| FDC | 1521 | 1 (ref) | |
| Loose NFDC | 373 | 0.83 (0.59, 1.18) | 0.295 |
| Coblistered NFDC (AS-AQ arms only) | 233 | 1.06 (0.68, 1.64) | 0.803 |
| AL arm‡ | 1891 | 1.03 (0.99, 1.07) | 0.091 |
| AS-AQ arm‡ | 1934 | 0.96 (0.94, 0.98) | < 0.001 |
| AL arm‡ | 1964 | 1.03 (1.00, 1.07) | 0.037 |
| AS-AQ arm‡ | 2001 | 0.97 (0.95, 1.00) | 0.052 |
*In a model including log10 EIR, drug, pfmdr1 86Y prevalence (per 10% increase) and interaction between drug and pfmdr1 86Y prevalence
†Site-level random effects not included because many sites did not measure this covariate
‡p value interaction between drug and pfmdr1 86Y vs N86 prevalence < 0.001, p value interaction between drug and pfcrt 76T vs K76 prevalence < 0.001
Risk factors for reinfection: multivariable analysis with pfmdr1. Data from 1934 individuals in the AS-AQ trial arms and 1655 in the AL trial arms were analyzed using accelerated failure-time analysis. Regression coefficients are the ratio of time to reinfection, such that a coefficient > 1 indicates a longer time to reinfection. Covariates significantly associated with reinfection time after adjusting for EIR (p < 0.05) were included in the final model. The prevalence of pfcrt 76T also had a significant effect in a multivariable model with the same covariates (Additional file 1: Table S1) but could not be included in the same model with pfmdr1 86Y due to strong correlation between the two variables. Models assume a lognormal time to reinfection and random site effects
| Covariate (unit) | AL multivariable model ( | AS-AQ multivariable model ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coefficient [ratio of reinfection times] (95% CI) | Coefficient [ratio of reinfection times] (95% CI) | |||
| Loge annual EIR | 0.81 (0.74, 0.90) | < 0.001 | 0.81 (0.75, 0.87) | < 0.001 |
| Age (polynomial, years, > 20 grouped together) | < 0.001 | < 0.001 | ||
| age | 1.01 (0.93, 1.09) | 0.94 (0.88, 1.00) | ||
| (age)2 | 1.00 (0.99, 1.02) | 1.01 (1.00, 1.02) | ||
| (age)3 | 1.0001 (0.9992, 1.0009) | 0.9998 (0.9993, 1.0003) | ||
| Lumefantrine dose (per 10 mg per kg increase) (AL arms only) | 1.03 (1.01, 1.06) | 0.002 | – | – |
| 1.04 (1.00, 1.09) | 0.059 | 0.97 (0.94, 0.99) | 0.012 | |
Fig. 4Duration of protection after treatment with a, c AS-AQ and b, d AL, according to local pfmdr1 N86Y (a, b) and pfcrt K76T mutation prevalence (c, d). Median posterior estimates of duration of protection from hidden Markov model analysis are shown (points) with 95% credible intervals (vertical lines). Local pfmdr1 N86Y and pfcrt K76T mutation prevalences are from matched surveys within 1 year and 300 km in the same country as each trial. Horizontal lines indicate the 95% confidence intervals of the mutation prevalence estimates