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Tytuł pozycji:

Global estimation of anti-malarial drug effectiveness for the treatment of uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria 1991–2019

Tytuł:
Global estimation of anti-malarial drug effectiveness for the treatment of uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria 1991–2019
Autorzy:
Giulia Rathmes
Susan F. Rumisha
Tim C. D. Lucas
Katherine A. Twohig
Andre Python
Michele Nguyen
Anita K. Nandi
Suzanne H. Keddie
Emma L. Collins
Jennifer A. Rozier
Harry S. Gibson
Elisabeth G. Chestnutt
Katherine E. Battle
Georgina S. Humphreys
Punam Amratia
Rohan Arambepola
Amelia Bertozzi-Villa
Penelope Hancock
Justin J. Millar
Tasmin L. Symons
Samir Bhatt
Ewan Cameron
Philippe J. Guerin
Peter W. Gething
Daniel J. Weiss
Temat:
Falciparum malaria
Anti-malarial drug effectiveness
Drug quality
Global
Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine
RC955-962
Infectious and parasitic diseases
RC109-216
Źródło:
Malaria Journal, Vol 19, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2020)
Wydawca:
BMC, 2020.
Rok publikacji:
2020
Kolekcja:
LCC:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine
LCC:Infectious and parasitic diseases
Typ dokumentu:
article
Opis pliku:
electronic resource
Język:
English
ISSN:
1475-2875
Relacje:
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-020-03446-8; https://doaj.org/toc/1475-2875
DOI:
10.1186/s12936-020-03446-8
Dostęp URL:
https://doaj.org/article/75741e781dc14dad9f176c6bd4bd7be9  Link otwiera się w nowym oknie
Numer akcesji:
edsdoj.75741e781dc14dad9f176c6bd4bd7be9
Czasopismo naukowe
Abstract Background Anti-malarial drugs play a critical role in reducing malaria morbidity and mortality, but their role is mediated by their effectiveness. Effectiveness is defined as the probability that an anti-malarial drug will successfully treat an individual infected with malaria parasites under routine health care delivery system. Anti-malarial drug effectiveness (AmE) is influenced by drug resistance, drug quality, health system quality, and patient adherence to drug use; its influence on malaria burden varies through space and time. Methods This study uses data from 232 efficacy trials comprised of 86,776 infected individuals to estimate the artemisinin-based and non-artemisinin-based AmE for treating falciparum malaria between 1991 and 2019. Bayesian spatiotemporal models were fitted and used to predict effectiveness at the pixel-level (5 km × 5 km). The median and interquartile ranges (IQR) of AmE are presented for all malaria-endemic countries. Results The global effectiveness of artemisinin-based drugs was 67.4% (IQR: 33.3–75.8), 70.1% (43.6–76.0) and 71.8% (46.9–76.4) for the 1991–2000, 2006–2010, and 2016–2019 periods, respectively. Countries in central Africa, a few in South America, and in the Asian region faced the challenge of lower effectiveness of artemisinin-based anti-malarials. However, improvements were seen after 2016, leaving only a few hotspots in Southeast Asia where resistance to artemisinin and partner drugs is currently problematic and in the central Africa where socio-demographic challenges limit effectiveness. The use of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) with a competent partner drug and having multiple ACT as first-line treatment choice sustained high levels of effectiveness. High levels of access to healthcare, human resource capacity, education, and proximity to cities were associated with increased effectiveness. Effectiveness of non-artemisinin-based drugs was much lower than that of artemisinin-based with no improvement over time: 52.3% (17.9–74.9) for 1991–2000 and 55.5% (27.1–73.4) for 2011–2015. Overall, AmE for artemisinin-based and non-artemisinin-based drugs were, respectively, 29.6 and 36% below clinical efficacy as measured in anti-malarial drug trials. Conclusions This study provides evidence that health system performance, drug quality and patient adherence influence the effectiveness of anti-malarials used in treating uncomplicated falciparum malaria. These results provide guidance to countries’ treatment practises and are critical inputs for malaria prevalence and incidence models used to estimate national level malaria burden.
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