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Title: | The impact of delayed treatment of uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria on progression to severe malaria: A systematic review and a pooled multicentre individual-patient meta-analysis. |
Authors: | Mousa A Al-Taiar A Anstey NM Badaut C Barber BE Bassat Q Challenger JD Cunnington AJ Datta D Drakeley CJ Ghani AC Gordeuk VR Grigg MJ Hugo P John CC Mayor A Migot-Nabias F Opoka RO Pasvol G Rees C Reyburn H Riley EM Shah BN Sitoe A Sutherland CJ Thuma PE Unger SA Viwami F Walther M Whitty CJM William T Okell LC |
Citation: | PLoS Med. 2020 Oct 19;17(10):e1003359. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003359. eCollection 2020 Oct. |
Abstract: | BACKGROUND: Delay in receiving treatment for uncomplicated malaria (UM) is often reported to increase the risk of developing severe malaria (SM), but access to treatment remains low in most high-burden areas. Understanding the contribution of treatment delay on progression to severe disease is critical to determine how quickly patients need to receive treatment and to quantify the impact of widely implemented treatment interventions, such as 'test-and-treat' policies administered by community health workers (CHWs). We conducted a pooled individual-participant meta-analysis to estimate the association between treatment delay and presenting with SM. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A search using Ovid MEDLINE and Embase was initially conducted to identify studies on severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria that included information on treatment delay, such as fever duration (inception to 22nd September 2017). Studies identified included 5 case-control and 8 other observational clinical studies of SM and UM cases. Risk of bias was assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa scale, and all studies were ranked as 'Good', scoring ≥7/10. Individual-patient data (IPD) were pooled from 13 studies of 3,989 (94.1% aged <15 years) SM patients and 5,780 (79.6% aged <15 years) UM cases in Benin, Malaysia, Mozambique, Tanzania, The Gambia, Uganda, Yemen, and Zambia. Definitions of SM were standardised across studies to compare treatment delay in patients with UM and different SM phenotypes using age-adjusted mixed-effects regression. The odds of any SM phenotype were significantly higher in children with longer delays between initial symptoms and arrival at the health facility (odds ratio [OR] = 1.33, 95% CI: 1.07-1.64 for a delay of >24 hours versus ≤24 hours; p = 0.009). Reported illness duration was a strong predictor of presenting with severe malarial anaemia (SMA) in children, with an OR of 2.79 (95% CI:1.92-4.06; p < 0.001) for a delay of 2-3 days and 5.46 (95% CI: 3.49-8.53; p < 0.001) for a delay of >7 days, compared with receiving treatment within 24 hours from symptom onset. We estimate that 42.8% of childhood SMA cases and 48.5% of adult SMA cases in the study areas would have been averted if all individuals were able to access treatment within the first day of symptom onset, if the association is fully causal. In studies specifically recording onset of nonsevere symptoms, long treatment delay was moderately associated with other SM phenotypes (OR [95% CI] >3 to ≤4 days versus ≤24 hours: cerebral malaria [CM] = 2.42 [1.24-4.72], p = 0.01; respiratory distress syndrome [RDS] = 4.09 [1.70-9.82], p = 0.002). In addition to unmeasured confounding, which is commonly present in observational studies, a key limitation is that many severe cases and deaths occur outside healthcare facilities in endemic countries, where the effect of delayed or no treatment is difficult to quantify. CONCLUSIONS: Our results quantify the relationship between rapid access to treatment and reduced risk of severe disease, which was particularly strong for SMA. There was some evidence to suggest that progression to other severe phenotypes may also be prevented by prompt treatment, though the association was not as strong, which may be explained by potential selection bias, sample size issues, or a difference in underlying pathology. These findings may help assess the impact of interventions that improve access to treatment. |
Click to open Pubmed Article: | https://www.ezpdhcs.nt.gov.au/login?url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33075101 |
Journal title: | PLoS medicine |
Volume: | 17 |
Pages: | e1003359 |
Publication Date: | 2020-10-19 |
Type: | Journal Article |
URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/10137/11455 |
DOI: | 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003359 |
Orcid: | 0000-0001-9406-7481 0000-0001-7421-3381 0000-0002-0064-6384 0000-0003-1066-7960 0000-0003-0875-7596 0000-0001-6029-1733 0000-0002-1305-3529 0000-0002-1693-935X 0000-0003-4863-075X 0000-0002-0007-4910 0000-0003-4725-7295 0000-0001-9914-8352 0000-0001-6489-4531 0000-0002-1634-1411 0000-0003-3890-2897 0000-0001-9982-594X 0000-0001-5649-7835 0000-0001-5169-7301 0000-0003-1592-6407 0000-0002-1508-4409 0000-0001-7089-5063 0000-0001-7202-6873 |
Appears in Collections: | (a) NT Health Research Collection |
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