| Literature DB >> 32953387 |
Arthurine K Zakama1, Nida Ozarslan2, Stephanie L Gaw1.
Abstract
Purpose of Review: Placental malaria is the primary mechanism through which malaria in pregnancy causes adverse perinatal outcomes. This review summarizes recent work on the significance, pathogenesis, diagnosis, and prevention of placental malaria. Recent Findings: Placental malaria, characterized by the accumulation of Plasmodium-infected red blood cells in the placental intervillous space, leads to adverse perinatal outcomes such as stillbirth, low birth weight, preterm birth, and small-for-gestational-age neonates. Placental inflammatory responses may be primary drivers of these complications. Associated factors contributing to adverse outcomes include maternal gravidity, timing of perinatal infection, and parasite burden. Summary: Placental malaria is an important cause of adverse birth outcomes in endemic regions. The main strategy to combat this is intermittent preventative treatment in pregnancy; however, increasing drug resistance threatens the efficacy of this approach. There are studies dissecting the inflammatory response to placental malaria, alternative preventative treatments, and in developing a vaccine for placental malaria. © Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2020.Entities:
Keywords: Malaria in pregnancy; Obstetrical outcomes of placental malaria; Pathogenesis of placental malaria; Placental malaria; Plasmodium infection; Prevention of placental malaria
Year: 2020 PMID: 32953387 PMCID: PMC7493061 DOI: 10.1007/s40475-020-00213-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Trop Med Rep
Fig. 1Global incidence of P. falciparum. Time-aware mosaic data set showing predicted all-age incidence rate (clinical cases per 1000 population per annum) of Plasmodium falciparum malaria for each year. Colors: one linear scale between rates of zero and 10 cases per 1000 (gray shades) and a second linear scale between 10 and 1000 (colors from purple to yellow). Malaria Atlas Project: WHO Collaborating Centre. Explorer Map - Plasmodium falciparum Incidence. No changes made to the map. Legend represented as is from map. Image located at: https://malariaatlas.org/explorer/#/. Available through open access via the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License accessible through: creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/. Disclaimer: Authors of this paper were not involved in the making of this map. This image was made through the Malaria Atlas Project. See open access attribution information above for details on accessing the map
Fig. 2Histological cross section of chorionic villi. (a) Chorionic villi (CV) have a continuous layer of syncytiotrophoblasts separating fetal and maternal cells. Fetal blood vessels (FBV) are located within the CV whereas maternal red blood cells (RBC) are circulating in the intervillous space (IVS). (b) During placental malaria, infected red blood cells (iRBC) accumulate within the IVS and lead to fibrin deposition (FD) and syncytial knot (SK) formation. Normal light (c) and polarized light (d) microscopy of malaria-infected placenta demonstrating hemozoin (HZ), dark-brown pigment in normal light and red in polarized light, accumulation within iRBC, and maternal intervillous monocyte (MIM)
Obstetrical outcomes associated with placental malaria
| Outcome | Relative risk (RR) (95% CI; | |
|---|---|---|
| Preterm birth | RR 7.52 (1.72–32.8, | |
| Low birth weight | RR 3.45, 95% CI 1.44–8.23, | #aRR 3.42; |
| Small for gestational age | RR 2.30, 95% CI 1.10–4.80, | #aRR 4.24, |
| Maternal anemia | *aOR 2.22, 95% CI 1.02–4.84; | |
| Stillbirth | +OR 1.95, 95% CI 1.48–2.57 | |
Data from Kapisi [16•], Lufele [42], Ategeka [43], and Moore [51]. Low birth weight represents neonates weight less than 2500 g
CI confidence interval
#Adjusted relative risk (aRR)
*Maternal anemia presented as adjusted odds ratio (aOR)
+Stillbirth presents as odds ratio.
Rogerson criteria for histopathologic diagnosis of placental malaria
| Active infection | Active-chronic infection | Past-chronic infection | Not infected |
|---|---|---|---|
| Presence of parasitized RBCs in the intervillous space with malaria pigment in RBCs and monocytes in the intervillous space; no pigment in fibrin | Pigment accumulation in fibrin, fibrin-containing cells, syncytiotrophoblasts, stroma accompanies the previous findings | Malaria pigment confined to fibrin or cells within fibrin in the absence of parasites | Absence of parasite in placental RBCs without malaria pigment |
Data from Rogerson [15]