| Literature DB >> 35331231 |
Abstract
Chemoprevention strategies reduce malaria disease and death, but the efficacy of anti-malarial drugs used for chemoprevention is perennially threatened by drug resistance. This review examines the current impact of chemoprevention on the emergence and spread of drug resistant malaria, and the impact of drug resistance on the efficacy of each of the chemoprevention strategies currently recommended by the World Health Organization, namely, intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy (IPTp); intermittent preventive treatment in infants (IPTi); seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC); and mass drug administration (MDA) for the reduction of disease burden in emergency situations. While the use of drugs to prevent malaria often results in increased prevalence of genetic mutations associated with resistance, malaria chemoprevention interventions do not inevitably lead to meaningful increases in resistance, and even high rates of resistance do not necessarily impair chemoprevention efficacy. At the same time, it can reasonably be anticipated that, over time, as drugs are widely used, resistance will generally increase and efficacy will eventually be lost. Decisions about whether, where and when chemoprevention strategies should be deployed or changed will continue to need to be made on the basis of imperfect evidence, but practical considerations such as prevalence patterns of resistance markers can help guide policy recommendations.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35331231 PMCID: PMC8943514 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-022-04115-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Definitions of Malaria Chemoprevention Strategies*
| Intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy (IPTp) | A full therapeutic course of anti-malarial medicine given to pregnant women at routine prenatal visits, regardless of whether the woman is infected with malaria |
| Intermittent preventive treatment in infants (IPTi) | A full therapeutic course of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine delivered to infants in co-administration with DTP2/Penta2, DTP3/Penta3 and measles immunization, regardless of whether the infant is infected with malaria |
Seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC) | Intermittent administration of full treatment courses of an anti-malarial medicine during the malaria season to prevent malarial illness. The objective is to maintain therapeutic concentrations of an anti-malarial drug in the blood throughout the period of greatest risk for malaria |
| Note: This intervention is recommended only for areas with highly seasonal malaria, where transmission occurs during a few months of the year | |
Mass drug administration (MDA) | Administration of anti-malarial treatment to all age groups of a defined population or every person living in a defined geographical area (except those for whom the medicine is contraindicated) at approximately the same time and often at repeated intervals |
*Definitions from WHO Malaria Terminology, last updated 2019[4]
Fig. 1Global map of the prevalence of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine resistance marker dihydrofolate reductase A581G. Data are from published sources and available at http://wwwarn.org/dhfr-dhps-surveyor/#0 (accessed 12 April 2021)
Fig. 2Frequency distributions of prevalence estimates of dhps K540E (L) and A581G (R) mutations measured in studies completed in sub-Saharan Africa from 2015–2021. Data were downloaded from http://www.wwarn.org/dhfr-dhps-surveyor and studies completed before 2015 and outside of Africa were excluded. Recent measures of K540E prevalence tend to cluster below 20% and above 50%, while A581G prevalence estimates lack an obvious break point
Fig. 3Re-analysis of data purportedly showing selection of resistance markers by monthly seasonal malaria chemoprevention in school-age Ugandan children. For each resistance marker, the three bars represent proportion of infections containing mutant genotypes at increasingly distant times from last drug treatment with Dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine. Panel A shows the original analysis, depicted here in graph form, and showing apparent selection of “pure mutant” genotypes of pfmdr1 N86Y and pfcrt K76T based on their increasing in prevalence after drug treatment. Panel B depicts a re-analysis of the same data showing no evidence of positive selection for mutant genotypes when all infections containing the mutation in question are considered to have resistant parasites. Data from Nankabirwa et al. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2016, 60:5649–54
Summary of key findings
| Measuring and monitoring resistance | Drug resistance is but one of many factors that determine the efficacy of IPTp, IPTi, SMC and MDA Clinical trials that measure health outcomes are the gold standard for measuring chemoprevention efficacy Drug treatment efficacy is not a reliable surrogate for chemoprevention efficacy Molecular markers accurately indicate the presence of drug resistant parasites, and can serve as useful but imperfect means of predicting chemoprevention efficacy Specific resistance markers must be validated independently as predictors of efficacy for each different chemoprevention regimen |
| Impact of IPTp on resistance | IPTp-SP appears to select for antifolate resistance mutations associated with low to moderate increases in drug resistance, but there is no convincing evidence of selection favouring the key mutations associated with higher level antifolate resistance and loss of ITPp-SP efficacy |
| Impact of resistance on IPTp | Despite some evidence that high level antifolate resistance at least partially compromises IPTp-SP efficacy, a worst-case scenario of harmful effects in the presence of SP resistance was not borne out by subsequent studies The evidence supporting a recommendation to withhold ITPp-SP where the prevalence of |
| Impact of IPTi on resistance | While IPTi-SP has been accompanied by overall increases in the prevalence of some antifolate resistance markers, there is little evidence of significant selection of the forms of resistance known to compromise SP efficacy for treatment or chemoprevention |
| Impact of resistance on IPTi | The evidence supporting a recommendation that IPTi-SP should not be deployed where prevalence of |
| Impact of SMC on resistance | While some studies have reported that SMC is followed by increased prevalence of resistance markers, other studies found no such evidence of selection There is no evidence that SMC results in increased prevalence of the higher-level resistance mutations that most severely impair SP efficacy, nor does SMC appear to select for parasites carrying mutations associated with amodiaquine resistance |
| Impact of resistance on SMC | Unless and until high-level resistance mutations become more prevalent in areas where SMC is used, it will not be possible to draw conclusions about the impact of resistance on SMC efficacy |
| Impact of MDA on resistance | There is no evidence that MDA in the modern era using highly effective ACTs results in increased drug resistance |
| Impact of resistance on MDA | In the past, drug resistance has diminished the efficacy of MDA when drugs have been used in sub-curative formulations and dosing regimens However, in the twenty-first century, MDA with highly effective combination drugs has proven efficacious even in the face of high levels of resistance |
| Other chemoprevention strategies | Evidence that seasonal malaria chemoprevention in school-age children increases drug resistance does not stand up to careful scrutiny Selection of clinically relevant forms of resistance by chemoprevention is not inevitable |
| Managing and mitigating resistance | Standardized protocols for measuring and monitoring chemoprevention efficacy are needed With imperfect evidence, practical considerations can help guide recommendations on when and where to deploy chemoprevention strategies Using different drugs for chemoprevention and treatment and combining drugs with countervailing resistance mechanisms may help to preserve efficacy The best approach for mitigating and managing drug resistance to protect the efficacy of chemoprevention strategies is to ensure a pipeline of safe and effective new malaria drugs with diverse mechanisms of action and resistance |