Not all severe malaria cases are severe: Is it time to redefine severity criteria for malaria in non-endemic regions?

IF 6.3 3区 医学 Q1 INFECTIOUS DISEASES Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease Pub Date : 2024-07-01 DOI:10.1016/j.tmaid.2024.102740
Leire Balerdi-Sarasola , Jose Muñoz , Pedro Fleitas , Natalia Rodriguez-Valero , Alex Almuedo-Riera , Alba Antequera , Carme Subirà , Ignacio Grafia-Perez , Maria Ortiz-Fernández , Tessa de Alba , Miriam J. Álvarez-Martínez , M Eugenia Valls , Claudio Parolo , Pedro Castro , Daniel Camprubí-Ferrer
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Abstract

Background

The current definition of severe malaria in non-endemic areas follows WHO criteria, which mainly target children in malaria-endemic areas, potentially misclassifying cases in non-endemic regions. We assessed the performance of a modified severe malaria classification criteria within our patient cohort.

Methods

A cohort study of patients managed for malaria in a non-endemic setting (2005–2023) was analyzed. We classified patients into severe malaria (SM) using WHO 2013 criteria except for hyperparasitemia, where 2 % threshold was applied. Patients with SM were distinguished as very severe malaria (VSM) when presenting at least one of the following conditions: parasitemia >10 %, pulmonary edema, impaired consciousness, seizures, renal failure, metabolic acidosis or hyperlactatemia, shock or hypoglycemia. In patients with SM and no criteria for VSM, less severe malaria (LSM) was defined by: 2–10 % parasitemia, hyperbilirubinemia, prostration, anemia or minor bleeding. The primary composite outcome was death or the need for a life-saving intervention, as analyzed in the three comparative groups. Secondary outcome was the prevalence of co-infections.

Results

Among 506 patients with malaria, 176 (34.8 %) presented with SM. A total of 37 (7.3 %) patients developed a life-threatening condition, namely death (n = 4) and/or the need for life-saving interventions (n = 34). All fatalities and 33 out of the 34 life-saving interventions occurred in the VSM group. Patients in LSM group did not develop any life-threatening conditions. As to co-infections, 28 (5.5 %) patients had a community-acquired co-infection, with no differences between groups (p = 0.763).

Conclusions

Severity criteria definitions would benefit from a review when assessing patients with malaria in non-endemic areas. Within the spectrum of SM, patients reclassified as LSM have a low risk of developing a life-threatening condition and present low co-infection incidence and could benefit from management out of intensive care units and a restrictive use of empirical antibiotics.

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并非所有重症疟疾病例都是重症:现在是重新定义非疟疾流行地区疟疾严重程度标准的时候了吗?
背景:目前,非疟疾流行地区重症疟疾的定义遵循世界卫生组织的标准,该标准主要针对疟疾流行地区的儿童,可能会误诊非疟疾流行地区的病例。我们在患者队列中评估了修改后的重症疟疾分类标准的性能:我们对在非疟疾流行地区接受疟疾治疗的患者进行了队列研究(2005-2023 年)。我们采用世界卫生组织 2013 年标准将患者分为重症疟疾 (SM),但高寄生虫血症除外,因为高寄生虫血症的阈值为 2%。重症疟疾患者如果至少出现以下一种情况,即寄生虫血症>10%、肺水肿、意识障碍、癫痫发作、肾功能衰竭、代谢性酸中毒或高乳酸血症、休克或低血糖,则被区分为极重症疟疾(VSM)。对于不符合 VSM 标准的 SM 患者,较轻疟疾(LSM)的定义是:2-10%寄生虫血症、高胆红素血症、衰弱、贫血或轻微出血。三个比较组的主要综合结果是死亡或需要救生干预。次要结果是合并感染的发生率:在 506 名疟疾患者中,176 人(34.8%)患有 SM。共有 37 名(7.3%)患者出现危及生命的情况,即死亡(4 人)和/或需要采取救生措施(34 人)。所有死亡病例和 34 次抢救中的 33 次都发生在 VSM 组。LSM组患者没有出现任何危及生命的情况。在合并感染方面,28(5.5%)名患者合并社区获得性感染,组间无差异(P=0.763):结论:在评估非疟疾流行地区的疟疾患者时,对严重程度标准定义进行审查将是有益的。在疟疾严重程度的范围内,被重新分类为低度严重程度的患者出现危及生命的情况的风险较低,合并感染的发生率也较低,可以从重症监护室外的管理和限制使用经验性抗生素中获益。
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来源期刊
Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease
Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-INFECTIOUS DISEASES
CiteScore
19.40
自引率
1.70%
发文量
211
审稿时长
49 days
期刊介绍: Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease Publication Scope: Publishes original papers, reviews, and consensus papers Primary theme: infectious disease in the context of travel medicine Focus Areas: Epidemiology and surveillance of travel-related illness Prevention and treatment of travel-associated infections Malaria prevention and treatment Travellers' diarrhoea Infections associated with mass gatherings Migration-related infections Vaccines and vaccine-preventable disease Global policy/regulations for disease prevention and control Practical clinical issues for travel and tropical medicine practitioners Coverage: Addresses areas of controversy and debate in travel medicine Aims to inform guidelines and policy pertinent to travel medicine and the prevention of infectious disease Publication Features: Offers a fast peer-review process Provides early online publication of accepted manuscripts Aims to publish cutting-edge papers
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