| Literature DB >> 33298080 |
Rida Mumtaz1, Lucy C Okell2, Joseph D Challenger3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In clinical trials of therapy for uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum, there are usually some patients who fail treatment even in the absence of drug resistance. Treatment failures, which can be due to recrudescence or re-infection, are categorized as 'clinical' or 'parasitological' failures, the former indicating that symptoms have returned. Asymptomatic recrudescence has public health implications for continued malaria transmission and may be important for the spread of drug-resistant malaria. As the number of recrudescences in an individual trial is often low, it is difficult to assess how commonplace asymptomatic recrudescence is, and with what factors it is associated.Entities:
Keywords: Artemether–lumefantrine; Artemisinin-based combination therapy; Clinical trials; Malaria; Plasmodium falciparum; Systematic review; Transmission; Treatment failure
Year: 2020 PMID: 33298080 PMCID: PMC7724891 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-020-03520-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Flowchart showing the origin of all studies included in this review
Summary of trial data used for regression modelling
| Quantity | Value |
|---|---|
| Total number of trials | 70 |
| Reporting days | 2 trials reported on day 14, 56 trials on day 28, 22 trials on day 42, one trial on day 45, one on day 56 |
| MAP prevalence estimates (mean and range) | 25.9% (0.2%, 86.5%) |
| Trials treating young children only (< 72 months) | 26 |
| Total number of patients treated | 8616 |
| Patients treated in each trial (mean and range) | 123 (23, 665) |
| Total number of patients for whom treatment failed | 14 ETFs, 380 recrudescences (of which 219 were asymptomatic and 161 (42.4%) were symptomatic) |
These data come from 60 published studies, splitting multi-centred studies by site (see full data in Additional file 2). This Table does not include data from 5 multi-country studies for which data could not be stratified by site (these data are included in the findings reported in Results section)
Factors associated with the proportion of recrudescences that were symptomatic
| Variable(s) included and regression parameter(s) | WAIC | Akaike Weight | Parameter values (95% CI) | Odds ratios (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Only young children enrolled (≤ 72 months) ( | 0.25 | 0.86 (0.79, 0.93) 1.62 (1.01, 2.59) | ||
Follow-up duration > 28 days ( Only young children enrolled ( | 506.9 | 0.20 | 0.85 (0.79, 0.92) 0.77 (0.50, 1.17) 1.62 (1.00, 2.56) | |
Only young children enrolled ( High density infections enrolled ( | 507.6 | 0.15 | 0.84 (0.77, 0.93) 1.55 (0.96, 2.53) 1.27 (0.66, 2.36) | |
Follow-up duration > 28 days ( Only young children enrolled ( High density infections enrolled ( | 507.9 | 0.12 | 0.84 (0.76, 0.92) 0.76 (0.5, 1.16) 1.55 (0.96, 2.53) 1.30 (0.67, 2.46) | |
| 508.8 | 0.08 | 0.87 (0.81, 0.94) |
A number of uni- and multivariable regression models were fitted to the data and compared. The variables included were: the MAP-estimated malaria prevalence in children 2–10 years of age at the time and location of each trial (PfPR2-10); the duration of follow-up in each trial; age range of the cohort enrolled; high-density infections included in the trial. The model fit was assessed by WAIC. The model that included variables for malaria prevalence and the age range of the cohort provided the best fit to the data. In addition, some of the other candidate models, ordered by WAIC, and the Akaike weight associated with each model in the ensemble, are described here. Parameter values and corresponding odds ratios are summarized by the posterior means and the 95% credible intervals
Fig. 2Model predictions for the proportion of recrudescences that are symptomatic. The proportion of recrudescences that are symptomatic decreases with transmission intensity, and is higher in young children. Points show data and lines are predictions from the multivariable regression modelling with 95% credible intervals as shaded areas. Results were generated from the best-fit model (Table 2), which included covariates for transmission intensity (measured as malaria prevalence) and age (binary variable, indicating trials that only enrolled children under 72 months old)