Abstract

Each year, 4.3 million pregnant women are exposed to malaria risk in Latin America and the Caribbean. Plasmodium vivax causes 76% of the regional malaria burden and appears to be less affected than P. falciparum by current elimination efforts. This is in part due to the parasite's ability to stay dormant in the liver and originate relapses within months after a single mosquito inoculation. Primaquine (PQ) is routinely combined with chloroquine (CQ) or other schizontocidal drugs to supress P. vivax relapses and reduce the risk of late blood-stage recrudescences of parasites with low-grade CQ resistance. However, PQ is contraindicated for pregnant women, who remain at increased risk of repeated infections following CQ-only treatment. Here we apply a mathematical model to time-to-recurrence data from Juruá Valley, Brazil's main malaria transmission hotspot, to quantify the extra burden of parasite recurrences attributable to PQ ineligibility in pregnant women. The model accounts for competing risks, since relapses and late recrudescences (that may be at least partially prevented by PQ) and new infections (that are not affected by PQ use) all contribute to recurrences. We compare recurrence rates observed after primary P. vivax infections in 158 pregnant women treated with CQ only and 316 P. vivax infections in non-pregnant control women, matched for age, date of infection, and place of residence, who were administered a standard CQ-PQ combination. We estimate that, once infected with P. vivax, 23% of the pregnant women have one or more vivax malaria recurrences over the next 12 weeks; 86% of these early P. vivax recurrences are attributable to relapses or late recrudescences, rather than new infections that could be prevented by reducing malaria exposure during pregnancy. Model simulations indicate that weekly CQ chemoprophylaxis extending over 4 to 12 weeks, starting after the first vivax malaria episode diagnosed in pregnancy, might reduce the risk of P. vivax recurrences over the next 12 months by 20% to 65%. We conclude that post-treatment CQ prophylaxis could be further explored as a measure to prevent vivax malaria recurrences in pregnancy and avert their adverse effects on maternal and neonatal health.

Highlights

  • Plasmodium vivax causes over 14 million clinical malaria cases each year worldwide and appears to be less affected than P. falciparum by current elimination efforts in Latin America and the Asia-Pacific Region [1]

  • Once infected with P. vivax, 23% of the pregnant women have one or more vivax malaria recurrences over the 12 weeks; 86% of these early P. vivax recurrences are attributable to relapses or late recrudescences, rather than new infections that could be prevented by reducing malaria exposure during pregnancy

  • Model simulations indicate that weekly CQ chemoprophylaxis extending over 4 to 12 weeks, starting after the first vivax malaria episode diagnosed in pregnancy, might reduce the risk of P. vivax recurrences over the 12 months by 20% to 65%

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Summary

Introduction

Plasmodium vivax causes over 14 million clinical malaria cases each year worldwide and appears to be less affected than P. falciparum by current elimination efforts in Latin America and the Asia-Pacific Region [1]. One distinctive feature of P. vivax associated with its increased resilience is the ability to stay in the liver as a dormant stage, the hypnozoite, following a primary infection. As a result, repeated episodes of blood-stage infection, known as relapses, may originate over the weeks or months from hypnozoites reactivating at different time points following a single mosquito inoculation [2]. Radical cure of P. vivax infections entails the use of primaquine (PQ), the only hypnozoitocidal agent currently available in endemic settings, combined with one or more schizontocidal drugs, such as chloroquine (CQ) or artemisinin derivatives. This drug cannot be administered to subjects with severe forms of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, since they may develop life-threatening hemolysis following treatment. Not all patients adhere to the 7-day PQ regimen commonly used in Latin America [8, 9]

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