Abstract

BackgroundPregnancy is a known risk factor for malaria which is associated with increased maternal and infant mortality and morbidity in areas of moderate-high malaria transmission intensity where Plasmodium falciparum predominates. The nature and impact of malaria, however, is not well understood in pregnant women residing in areas of low, unstable malaria transmission where P. falciparum and P. vivax co-exist.MethodsA large longitudinal active surveillance study of malaria was conducted in the Chittagong Hill Districts of Bangladesh. Over 32 months in 2010–2013, the period prevalence of asymptomatic P. falciparum infections was assessed by rapid diagnostic test and blood smear and compared among men, non-pregnant women and pregnant women. A subset of samples was tested for infection by PCR. Hemoglobin was assessed. Independent risk factors for malaria infection were determined using a multivariate logistic regression model.ResultsTotal of 34 asymptomatic P. falciparum infections were detected by RDT/smear from 3,110 tests. The period prevalence of asymptomatic P. falciparum infection in pregnant women was 2.3%, compared to 0.5% in non-pregnant women and 0.9% in men. All RDT/smear positive samples that were tested by PCR were PCR-positive, and PCR detected additional 35 infections that were RDT/smear negative. In a multivariate logistic regression analysis, pregnant women had 5.4-fold higher odds of infection as compared to non-pregnant women. Malaria-positive pregnant women, though asymptomatic, had statistically lower hemoglobin than those without malaria or pregnancy. Asymptomatic malaria was found to be evenly distributed across space and time, in contrast to symptomatic infections which tend to cluster.ConclusionPregnancy is a risk factor for asymptomatic P. falciparum infection in the Chittagong Hill Districts of Bangladesh, and pregnancy and malaria interact to heighten the effect of each on hemoglobin. The even distribution of asymptomatic malaria, without temporal and spatial clustering, may have critical implications for malaria elimination strategies.

Highlights

  • Pregnancy is a known risk factor for malaria which is associated with increased maternal and infant mortality and morbidity in areas of moderate-high malaria transmission intensity where Plasmodium falciparum predominates

  • This paper describes a clinical field study to estimate the period prevalence of asymptomatic malaria infection among apparently healthy pregnant women, in comparison with nonpregnant women and adult men

  • The study was conducted as part of a large passive and active malaria surveillance system established in the Chittagong Hill Districts (CHD) of Bangladesh to study the epidemiology of malaria in the region, and to link demographic, clinical, and entomologic factors in the determination of important risk factors for malaria

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Summary

Introduction

Pregnancy is a known risk factor for malaria which is associated with increased maternal and infant mortality and morbidity in areas of moderate-high malaria transmission intensity where Plasmodium falciparum predominates. In African countries with moderate to high malaria transmission, antimalarial drug combination sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine is used to protect pregnant women, regardless of malaria symptoms, from the malaria-related negative pregnancy outcomes [13]. This treatment, known as intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp), significantly reduces malaria-related adverse effects on the mother and the fetus and improves birth outcomes [14,15] and has been implemented as part of routine antenatal care in 34 of 44 African countries with ongoing malaria transmission following the recommendations of World Health Organization

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