The duration of chemoprophylaxis against malaria after treatment with artesunate-amodiaquine and artemether-lumefantrine and the effects of pfmdr1 86Y and pfcrt 76T: a meta-analysis of individual patient data

  • Michael T Bretscher
  • Prabin Dahal
  • Jamie Griffin
  • Kasia Stepniewska
  • Quique Bassat
  • Elisabeth Baudin
  • Umberto D'Alessandro
  • Abdoulaye A Djimde
  • Grant Dorsey
  • Emmanuelle Espié
  • Bakary Fofana
  • Raquel González
  • Elizabeth Juma
  • Corine Karema
  • Estrella Lasry
  • Bertrand Lell
  • Nines Lima
  • Clara Menéndez
  • Ghyslain Mombo-Ngoma
  • Clarissa Moreira
  • Frederic Nikiema
  • Jean B Ouédraogo
  • Sarah G Staedke
  • Halidou Tinto
  • Innocent Valea
  • Adoke Yeka
  • Azra C Ghani
  • Centre for Tropical Medicine & Global Health Nuffield Department of Medicine University of Oxford UK
  • Lucy C Okell

Related Research units

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The majority of Plasmodium falciparum malaria cases in Africa are treated with the artemisinin combination therapies artemether-lumefantrine (AL) and artesunate-amodiaquine (AS-AQ), with amodiaquine being also widely used as part of seasonal malaria chemoprevention programs combined with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine. While artemisinin derivatives have a short half-life, lumefantrine and amodiaquine may give rise to differing durations of post-treatment prophylaxis, an important additional benefit to patients in higher transmission areas.

METHODS: We analyzed individual patient data from 8 clinical trials of AL versus AS-AQ in 12 sites in Africa (n = 4214 individuals). The time to PCR-confirmed reinfection after treatment was used to estimate the duration of post-treatment protection, accounting for variation in transmission intensity between settings using hidden semi-Markov models. Accelerated failure-time models were used to identify potential effects of covariates on the time to reinfection. The estimated duration of chemoprophylaxis was then used in a mathematical model of malaria transmission to determine the potential public health impact of each drug when used for first-line treatment.

RESULTS: We estimated a mean duration of post-treatment protection of 13.0 days (95% CI 10.7-15.7) for AL and 15.2 days (95% CI 12.8-18.4) for AS-AQ overall. However, the duration varied significantly between trial sites, from 8.7-18.6 days for AL and 10.2-18.7 days for AS-AQ. Significant predictors of time to reinfection in multivariable models were transmission intensity, age, drug, and parasite genotype. Where wild type pfmdr1 and pfcrt parasite genotypes predominated (<=20% 86Y and 76T mutants, respectively), AS-AQ provided ~ 2-fold longer protection than AL. Conversely, at a higher prevalence of 86Y and 76T mutant parasites (> 80%), AL provided up to 1.5-fold longer protection than AS-AQ. Our simulations found that these differences in the duration of protection could alter population-level clinical incidence of malaria by up to 14% in under-5-year-old children when the drugs were used as first-line treatments in areas with high, seasonal transmission.

CONCLUSION: Choosing a first-line treatment which provides optimal post-treatment prophylaxis given the local prevalence of resistance-associated markers could make a significant contribution to reducing malaria morbidity.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1741-7015
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 25.02.2020
PubMed 32098634