| Literature DB >> 33075101 |
Andria Mousa1, Abdullah Al-Taiar2, Nicholas M Anstey3,4, Cyril Badaut5,6, Bridget E Barber3,7, Quique Bassat8,9,10,11,12, Joseph D Challenger1, Aubrey J Cunnington13, Dibyadyuti Datta14, Chris Drakeley15, Azra C Ghani1, Victor R Gordeuk16, Matthew J Grigg3, Pierre Hugo17, Chandy C John14, Alfredo Mayor8,9,12, Florence Migot-Nabias18, Robert O Opoka19, Geoffrey Pasvol20, Claire Rees21, Hugh Reyburn15, Eleanor M Riley15,22, Binal N Shah16, Antonio Sitoe9, Colin J Sutherland15, Philip E Thuma23, Stefan A Unger24,25, Firmine Viwami26, Michael Walther27, Christopher J M Whitty15, Timothy William28,29, Lucy C Okell1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Delay in receiving treatment for uncomplicated malaria (UM) is often reported to increase the risk of developing severe malaria (SM), but access to treatment remains low in most high-burden areas. Understanding the contribution of treatment delay on progression to severe disease is critical to determine how quickly patients need to receive treatment and to quantify the impact of widely implemented treatment interventions, such as 'test-and-treat' policies administered by community health workers (CHWs). We conducted a pooled individual-participant meta-analysis to estimate the association between treatment delay and presenting with SM. METHODS ANDEntities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33075101 PMCID: PMC7571702 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Characteristics of studies used in IPD meta-analysis.
Table includes study site, study period, age ranges included, and frequencies and percentages of uncomplicated and SM groups amongst the study sample. Percentages with a given phenotype amongst severe cases are shown in brackets and omit missing values for that phenotype. The denominator only includes those who were assessed for that phenotype. ‘NA’ entries indicate that information on the phenotype in that study was not collected (for example, data on RDS were not collected in the Zambian study). Percentages may add up to more than 100% because the same study subject may present with more than 1 phenotype. This table excludes 196 individuals (2% of total participants) who were classified as severe in the original studies but did not meet the criteria for severe disease in the IPD analysis. See S2 Table for other severe disease phenotypes. See S4 Table for SM frequencies from the UK study, which was not used in the pooled analysis. Abbreviations: CM, cerebral malaria; IPD, individual-participant data; RDS, respiratory distress syndrome; SM, severe malaria SMA, severe malarial anaemia; UM, uncomplicated malaria.
| Study Site | Years | Age Range | UM (%) | SM (%) | SMA (%) | RDS (%) | CM (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 2009 to Aug 2009 | 4 months to 14 years | 46 (51.1) | 44 (48.9) | 5 (55.6) | 16 (38.1) | 7 (16.7) | |
| Sept 2002 to Dec 2002 | 1 months to 10 years | 139 (30.2) | 321 (69.8) | 124 (56.6) | 59 (18.7) | 38 (16.9) | |
| Aug 2007 to Jan 2011 | 8 months to 16 years | 360 (55.0) | 295 (45.0) | 22 (7.8) | 130 (88.4) | 55 (18.8) | |
| Nov 2009 to Apr 2012 | 4 months to 5 years | 31 (83.8) | 6 (16.2) | 1 (20.0) | NA | 0 (0.0) | |
| Sept 2010 to Nov 2012 | 13 years to 78 years | 175 (89.7) | 20 (10.3) | 2 (10.0) | 4 (22.2) | 2 (12.5) | |
| Apr 2006 to Nov 2006 | 2 months to 5 years | 63 (46.3) | 73 (53.7) | 24 (32.9) | 31 (42.5) | 7 (9.6) | |
| Sept 2014 to May 2016 | under 10 years | 55 (37.2) | 93 (62.8) | 29 (31.2) | 13 (14.0) | 16 (17.2) | |
| Feb 2002 to Aug 2002 | All ages | 2,941 (67.8) | 1,399 (32.2) | 819 (59.7) | 220 (15.9) | 171 (12.7) | |
| Jun 2006 to May 2007 | 2 months to 13 years | 1,368 (63.2) | 798 (36.8) | 413 (51.8) | 239 (30.0) | 92 (11.5) | |
| 2003 to 2008 | 2 years to 15 years | 90 (51.4) | 85 (48.6) | NA | NA | 85 (100.0) | |
| 2008 to 2013 | 1 year to 11 years | 0 (0.0) | 494 (100.0) | 289 (58.5) | 134 (27.1) | 262 (53.0) | |
| Nov 2002 to Aug 2004 | 6 months to 10 years | 445 (63.8) | 253 (36.2) | 101 (39.9) | 136 (53.8) | 19 (7.5) | |
| Mar 2001 to May 2005 | 5 months to 7 years | 67 (38.3) | 108 (61.7) | 72 (66.7) | NA | 33 (30.6) | |
Fig 1Prevalence of SM phenotypes amongst severe cases by age group.
Proportions were calculated for severe cases with no missing values for a given measure. Information for all phenotypes was not available in all studies (Table 1, S2 and S4 Tables). Each case can present with more than 1 phenotype. SM, severe malaria.
Fig 2Illness duration (in days) prior to arrival at the health facility by SM phenotype and age group.
Box-and-whisker plots showing median and IQR of duration of illness/fever in children and adults stratified by severity group (ages <15 years: NUM = 3,277, NSM = 3,708; ages ≥15 years: NUM = 300, NSM = 226). Outliers (observations that are 1.5 × IQR from the lower or upper quartiles) are denoted. Extreme outliers, defined as duration of illness of over 3 weeks, are omitted from these plots (0.6% of cases [20 UM and 25 SM] were omitted). SM, severe malaria; UM, uncomplicated malaria.
Fig 3Treatment delay and odds of presenting with any SM (A), SMA (B), and receiving blood transfusion (C) in children under 15. ORs (and 95% CIs) for presentation with severe disease rather than UM (A & B) with each additional reported day of delay after initial symptoms, compared with patients receiving treatment within 1 day of symptom onset (NUM = 3,277, NSM = 3,708, NSMA = 1,774). Amongst 5 studies with information on blood transfusions during hospital admission, 27.7% (1,520/5,496) of children aged under 15 with available data had received a blood transfusion. ORs (and 95% CIs) for receiving a blood transfusion was estimated for each additional day of illness duration amongst all uncomplicated and severe cases. All ORs shown were obtained from a mixed-effects logistic regression adjusted for age as a linear predictor and allowed for random study effects. Statistically significant ORs are denoted in red (dashed purple line: OR = 1). OR, odds ratio; SM, severe malaria; SMA, severe malarial anaemia; UM, uncomplicated malaria.
Fig 4Treatment delay and change in Hb levels for (A) children aged under 15 and (B) adults aged 15 years and over. The change in Hb in g/dl for each extra day of delay compared with Hb in those treated within 24 hours. An increase in delay was associated with decrease in Hb levels (children: likelihood ratio χ2(7) = 361.16, p < 0.001; adults: likelihood ratio χ2(7) = 41.62, p < 0.001). Hb was recorded for 5,908 individuals in 10 of the studies, and its concentration was normally distributed. A mixed-effects general linear model was used to examine the relationship between delay and Hb levels, irrespective of severity group. On average, children who were admitted to the hospital more than 3 days after symptom onset had a reduction in Hb of at least 2 g/dl compared with those receiving treatment in the first day after illness onset. Hb, haemoglobin.
Fig 5Treatment delay and odds of presenting with CM (A–B) and respiratory distress (C–D) in children <15 years. ORs (and 95% CIs) for presentation with severe disease with each additional reported day of illness before attending the health facility compared with patients attending within 1 day of reported illness onset (A and C; NUM = 3,277, NCM = 737, NRDS = 945) or fever onset (B and D; NUM = 492, NCM = 441, NRDS = 251). ORs were obtained from a mixed-effects logistic regression adjusted for age as a linear predictor and allowed for random study effects. Statistically significant ORs are denoted in red (dashed purple line: OR = 1). The same plots for other SM phenotypes are shown in S9 Fig. CM, cerebral malaria; OR, odds ratio; RDS, respiratory distress syndrome; SM, severe malaria UM, uncomplicated malaria.
Fig 6Association between delay to treatment and SMA for different levels of transmission intensity in children <15 years.
ORs for the association between duration of illness and SMA from 2 age-adjusted mixed-effects models: one adjusting for transmission intensity level and one accounting for an interaction between transmission intensity and delay. Transmission intensity was categorised into low (PfPR2–10 < 10%), moderate (PfPR2–10 10% to <35%), and high (PfPR2–10 ≥ 35%). CIs around the OR estimates are shown in S10 Table. OR, odds ratio; SMA, severe malarial anaemia.