| Literature DB >> 32752056 |
Sarah D'Alessandro1, Elena Menegola2, Silvia Parapini3, Donatella Taramelli4, Nicoletta Basilico1.
Abstract
Artemisinin combination therapy (ACT) is recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) as first line treatment for uncomplicated malaria both in adults and children. During pregnancy, ACT is considered safe only in the second and third trimester, since animal studies have demonstrated that artemisinin derivatives can cause foetal death and congenital malformation within a narrow time window in early embryogenesis. During this period, artemisinin derivatives induce defective embryonic erythropoiesis and vasculogenesis/angiogenesis in experimental models. However, clinical data on the safety profile of ACT in pregnant women have not shown an increased risk of miscarriage, stillbirth, or congenital malformation, nor low birth weight, associated with exposure to artemisinins in the first trimester. Although further studies are needed, the evidence collected up to now is prompting the WHO towards a change in the guidelines for the treatment of uncomplicated malaria, allowing the use of ACT also in the first trimester of pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: artemisinins; embryotoxicity; malaria; pregnancy; safety
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32752056 PMCID: PMC7435965 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25153505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Artemisinin 1 and its derivatives, dihydroartemisinin (DHA) 2, artemether 3, and artesunate 4.
Recommended treatment for P.falciparum malaria during pregnancy (WHO, Guidelines for treatment of malaria).
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Figure 2Phases of hematopoiesis in experimental rodents and humans during embryogenesis.
Figure 3Erythroid development from the hematopoietic stem cell to mature erythrocytes (EB: erythroblast; baso: basophilic; poly: polychromatic; ortho: orthochromatic.
Observational studies on the use of artemisinin derivatives in the first trimester of pregnancy.
| Author, Publication Year [ref] | ACT | Country | Period | N. of Women Involved | Period of Exposure | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Augusto 2020 [ | AL | Mozambique, Burkina Faso and Kenya | 2011–13 | 92 | 2–13 weeks | No evidence of an increased risk of LBW, SGA or prematurity among pregnancies with ACT exposure during the first trimester of pregnancy |
| Rouamba 2020 [ | ASAQ | Burkina Faso | 2010–12 | 13 | 10 in the third month; 2 in the second; 1 in the first | 12 women delivered live newborns (including one with twins) with no congenital malformations. One woman had experienced a spontaneous abortion that was judged not to be related to ASAQ |
| Moore 2016 [ | ACTs | Thai–Myanmar border | 1994–2013 | 183 | 5–11 weeks | No evidence that first-line treatment with an artemisinin derivative was associated with an increased risk of miscarriage or congenital malformations |
| Manyando 2015 [ | AL | Zambia | 2004–2008 | 156 | <14 weeks | No evidence of higher risk of perinatal or neonatal mortality, premature delivery or low birth weight in women exposed AL compared with SP exposure |
| Dellicour S 2015 [ | ACTs | Kenya | 2011–13 | 77 | 6–13 weeks | Artemisinin exposure during the potential embryo-sensitive period was not associated with increased risk of miscarriage. |
| Poespoprodjo 2014 [ | AS-DHA/PQ | Indonesia | 2004–09 | 22 | The risk of abortion was over 60% in women receiving an ACT compared to 1% in women treated with quinine. None of the 10 women who received IV artesunate miscarried | |
| Mosha D 2014 [ | AL | Tanzania | 2012–13 | 172 | <20 weeks | Exposure to AL in the first trimester was common. Quinine, but not AL exposure was associated with adverse pregnancy outcome |
| Dellicour 2013 [ | ACTs | Senegal | 2004–08 | 7 | 3 of 7 4–10 weeks | Exposure to ACTs resulted in normal live births. |
| McGready R 2012 [ | Artesunate or ACT | Thailand | 1986–2010 | 44 | 6–12 weeks | Risk of miscarriage was similar for women treated with CQ, Q or Artesunate |
| Rulisa S 2012 [ | AL | Rwanda | 2007–2009 | 96 | Increased frequency of obstetric adverse outcomes but no significant increase in congenital defects after AL treatment in all trimesters of pregnancy | |
| Adam 2009 [ | Artemether-AS/SP-AL | Sudan | 2006–2008 | 62 | <12 weeks | Women delivered apparently healthy babies at full term. No congenital malformations, no preterm labour, no maternal deaths; none of the babies died during their first year of life. |
| Adam 2004 [ | Artemether | Sudan | 1997–2001 | 1 | 10 weeks | No abortion, stillbirth or congenital abnormalities in the newborn baby. |
| McGready 2001 [ | Artesunate | Thailand | 1992–2000 | 44 | 3–12.9 weeks | The rates of abortion, congenital abnormality, and stillbirth were all within the normal range of their communities |
| Deen 2001 [ | Artesunate-PSD | Gambia | 1999 | 77 | No evidence of a teratogenic effect, no evidence of increased foetal loss or infant death | |
| McGready 1998 [ | Artesunate | Thailand | 1992–96 | 13 | 3–12 weeks | No congenital abnormality in any of the newborn children, no adverse effect was found in women or neonates. |