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Projected health impact of post-discharge malaria chemoprevention among children with severe malarial anaemia in Africa

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posted on 2024-07-29, 15:16 authored by Lucy C Okell, Titus K Kwambai, Aggrey Dhabangi, Carole Khairallah, Thandile Nkosi-Gondwe, Peter Winskill, Robert Opoka, Andria Mousa, Melf-Jakob Kühl, Tim CD Lucas, Joseph D Challenger, Richard Idro, Daniel J Weiss, Matthew Cairns, Feiko O ter Kuile, Kamija Phiri, Bjarne Robberstad, Amani Thomas Mori

Children recovering from severe malarial anaemia (SMA) remain at high risk of readmission and death after discharge from hospital. However, a recent trial found that post-discharge malaria chemoprevention (PDMC) with dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine reduces this risk. We developed a mathematical model describing the daily incidence of uncomplicated and severe malaria requiring readmission among 0–5-year old children after hospitalised SMA. We fitted the model to a multicentre clinical PDMC trial using Bayesian methods and modelled the potential impact of PDMC across malaria-endemic African countries. In the 20 highest-burden countries, we estimate that only 2–5 children need to be given PDMC to prevent one hospitalised malaria episode, and less than 100 to prevent one death. If all hospitalised SMA cases access PDMC in moderate-to-high transmission areas, 38,600 (range 16,900–88,400) malaria-associated readmissions could be prevented annually, depending on access to hospital care. We estimate that recurrent SMA post-discharge constitutes 19% of all SMA episodes in moderate-to-high transmission settings.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Population Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Nature Communications

Volume

14

Issue

1

Pagination

402

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

issn

2041-1723

eissn

2041-1723

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2024-07-29

Spatial coverage

England

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Tim Lucas

Deposit date

2024-07-25

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