Outpatient treatment of imported uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria: results from a survey among TropNet and GeoSentinel experts for tropical medicine

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Outpatient treatment of imported uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria: results from a survey among TropNet and GeoSentinel experts for tropical medicine. / Lingscheid, Tilman; Kurth, Florian; Stegemann, Miriam S; Clerinx, Jan; Calleri, Guido; Rothe, Camilla; Angheben, Andrea; Gobbi, Federico; Bisoffi, Zeno; Hamer, Davidson H; Libman, Michael; Hatz, Christoph; Zoller, Thomas.

in: J TRAVEL MED, Jahrgang 27, Nr. 4, 14.07.2020, S. taaa082.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Lingscheid, T, Kurth, F, Stegemann, MS, Clerinx, J, Calleri, G, Rothe, C, Angheben, A, Gobbi, F, Bisoffi, Z, Hamer, DH, Libman, M, Hatz, C & Zoller, T 2020, 'Outpatient treatment of imported uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria: results from a survey among TropNet and GeoSentinel experts for tropical medicine', J TRAVEL MED, Jg. 27, Nr. 4, S. taaa082. https://doi.org/10.1093/jtm/taaa082

APA

Lingscheid, T., Kurth, F., Stegemann, M. S., Clerinx, J., Calleri, G., Rothe, C., Angheben, A., Gobbi, F., Bisoffi, Z., Hamer, D. H., Libman, M., Hatz, C., & Zoller, T. (2020). Outpatient treatment of imported uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria: results from a survey among TropNet and GeoSentinel experts for tropical medicine. J TRAVEL MED, 27(4), taaa082. https://doi.org/10.1093/jtm/taaa082

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{70dba649355f4be899abc150a0438c06,
title = "Outpatient treatment of imported uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria: results from a survey among TropNet and GeoSentinel experts for tropical medicine",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Plasmodium falciparum malaria (P.f. malaria) is frequently imported to non-endemic countries. Recommendations on outpatient treatment differ largely due to differences in country-level guidelines and even between tropical medicine referral centres within the same country.METHODS: This survey among experts from TropNet or GeoSentinel referral centres for tropical medicine outside malaria endemic areas investigated common practices in P.f. malaria management, selection criteria for outpatient management and diagnostic procedures as a first step for developing a future common and evidence-based approach.RESULTS: A total of 44 referral centres participated. Most of the centres are located in Europe (n = 37). Overall, 27 centres (61%) treat uncomplicated P.f. malaria patients as outpatients, of which eight centres (18%) reported treating ≥75% of patients on an outpatient basis. Seventeen centres (39%) reported treating patients only as inpatients. No single criterion stands out for the decision regarding outpatient treatment, but three groups of factors were identified: (i) clinical criteria including laboratory parameters, clinical condition and tolerance of oral medication; (ii) factors such as patient compliance, reachability by phone and support at home and (iii) patient origin and place of residence as a proxy for possible underlying semi-immunity. The threshold parasitaemia for outpatient treatment varied from 0.1 to 5% with a median of 2%. A median of 0.5% of outpatients were admitted during follow-up. During the last 10 years, 33 complications were reported by nine of the 27 centres and three deaths by one centre.CONCLUSION: This study gives insight into the heterogeneous management of P.f. malaria patients outside endemic regions. Although there is no consensus among experts, the majority of centres includes outpatient treatment in their clinical routine. However, the lack of evidence-based criteria and established safety for this approach shows the need for prospective studies to define and evaluate criteria and practices for safe outpatient management.",
author = "Tilman Lingscheid and Florian Kurth and Stegemann, {Miriam S} and Jan Clerinx and Guido Calleri and Camilla Rothe and Andrea Angheben and Federico Gobbi and Zeno Bisoffi and Hamer, {Davidson H} and Michael Libman and Christoph Hatz and Thomas Zoller",
note = "{\textcopyright} International Society of Travel Medicine 2020. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.",
year = "2020",
month = jul,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1093/jtm/taaa082",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "taaa082",
journal = "J TRAVEL MED",
issn = "1195-1982",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Outpatient treatment of imported uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria: results from a survey among TropNet and GeoSentinel experts for tropical medicine

AU - Lingscheid, Tilman

AU - Kurth, Florian

AU - Stegemann, Miriam S

AU - Clerinx, Jan

AU - Calleri, Guido

AU - Rothe, Camilla

AU - Angheben, Andrea

AU - Gobbi, Federico

AU - Bisoffi, Zeno

AU - Hamer, Davidson H

AU - Libman, Michael

AU - Hatz, Christoph

AU - Zoller, Thomas

N1 - © International Society of Travel Medicine 2020. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

PY - 2020/7/14

Y1 - 2020/7/14

N2 - BACKGROUND: Plasmodium falciparum malaria (P.f. malaria) is frequently imported to non-endemic countries. Recommendations on outpatient treatment differ largely due to differences in country-level guidelines and even between tropical medicine referral centres within the same country.METHODS: This survey among experts from TropNet or GeoSentinel referral centres for tropical medicine outside malaria endemic areas investigated common practices in P.f. malaria management, selection criteria for outpatient management and diagnostic procedures as a first step for developing a future common and evidence-based approach.RESULTS: A total of 44 referral centres participated. Most of the centres are located in Europe (n = 37). Overall, 27 centres (61%) treat uncomplicated P.f. malaria patients as outpatients, of which eight centres (18%) reported treating ≥75% of patients on an outpatient basis. Seventeen centres (39%) reported treating patients only as inpatients. No single criterion stands out for the decision regarding outpatient treatment, but three groups of factors were identified: (i) clinical criteria including laboratory parameters, clinical condition and tolerance of oral medication; (ii) factors such as patient compliance, reachability by phone and support at home and (iii) patient origin and place of residence as a proxy for possible underlying semi-immunity. The threshold parasitaemia for outpatient treatment varied from 0.1 to 5% with a median of 2%. A median of 0.5% of outpatients were admitted during follow-up. During the last 10 years, 33 complications were reported by nine of the 27 centres and three deaths by one centre.CONCLUSION: This study gives insight into the heterogeneous management of P.f. malaria patients outside endemic regions. Although there is no consensus among experts, the majority of centres includes outpatient treatment in their clinical routine. However, the lack of evidence-based criteria and established safety for this approach shows the need for prospective studies to define and evaluate criteria and practices for safe outpatient management.

AB - BACKGROUND: Plasmodium falciparum malaria (P.f. malaria) is frequently imported to non-endemic countries. Recommendations on outpatient treatment differ largely due to differences in country-level guidelines and even between tropical medicine referral centres within the same country.METHODS: This survey among experts from TropNet or GeoSentinel referral centres for tropical medicine outside malaria endemic areas investigated common practices in P.f. malaria management, selection criteria for outpatient management and diagnostic procedures as a first step for developing a future common and evidence-based approach.RESULTS: A total of 44 referral centres participated. Most of the centres are located in Europe (n = 37). Overall, 27 centres (61%) treat uncomplicated P.f. malaria patients as outpatients, of which eight centres (18%) reported treating ≥75% of patients on an outpatient basis. Seventeen centres (39%) reported treating patients only as inpatients. No single criterion stands out for the decision regarding outpatient treatment, but three groups of factors were identified: (i) clinical criteria including laboratory parameters, clinical condition and tolerance of oral medication; (ii) factors such as patient compliance, reachability by phone and support at home and (iii) patient origin and place of residence as a proxy for possible underlying semi-immunity. The threshold parasitaemia for outpatient treatment varied from 0.1 to 5% with a median of 2%. A median of 0.5% of outpatients were admitted during follow-up. During the last 10 years, 33 complications were reported by nine of the 27 centres and three deaths by one centre.CONCLUSION: This study gives insight into the heterogeneous management of P.f. malaria patients outside endemic regions. Although there is no consensus among experts, the majority of centres includes outpatient treatment in their clinical routine. However, the lack of evidence-based criteria and established safety for this approach shows the need for prospective studies to define and evaluate criteria and practices for safe outpatient management.

U2 - 10.1093/jtm/taaa082

DO - 10.1093/jtm/taaa082

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 32442249

VL - 27

SP - taaa082

JO - J TRAVEL MED

JF - J TRAVEL MED

SN - 1195-1982

IS - 4

ER -