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   Unsupervised primaquine for the treatment of Plasmodium vivax malaria relapses in southern Papua: A hospital-based cohort study  
   
نویسنده douglas n.m. ,poespoprodjo j.r. ,patriani d. ,malloy m.j. ,kenangalem e. ,sugiarto p. ,simpson j.a. ,soenarto y. ,anstey n.m. ,price r.n.
منبع plos medicine - 2017 - دوره : 14 - شماره : 8
چکیده    Background: primaquine is the only licensed drug for eradicating plasmodium vivax hypnozoites and,therefore,preventing relapses of vivax malaria. it is a vital component of global malaria elimination efforts. primaquine is efficacious when supervised in clinical trials,but its effectiveness in real-world settings is unknown. we aimed to determine whether unsupervised primaquine was effective for preventing re-presentation to hospital with vivax malaria in southern papua,indonesia. methods and findings: routinely-collected hospital surveillance data were used to undertake a pragmatic comparison of the risk of re-presentation to hospital with vivax malaria in patients prescribed dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (dhp) combined with primaquine versus those patients prescribed dhp alone. the omission of primaquine was predominantly due to 3 stock outages. individual clinical,pharmacy,and laboratory data were merged using individual hospital identification numbers and the date of presentation to hospital. between april 2004 and december 2013,there were 86,797 documented episodes of vivax malaria,of which 62,492 (72.0%) were included in the analysis. the risk of re-presentation with vivax malaria within 1 year was 33.8% (95% confidence interval [ci] 33.1%–34.5%) after initial monoinfection with p. vivax and 29.2% (95% ci 28.1%–30.4%) after mixed-species infection. the risk of re-presentation with p. vivax malaria was higher in children 1 to <5 years of age (49.6% [95% ci 48.4%–50.9%]) compared to patients 15 years of age or older (24.2% [95% ci 23.4–24.9%]); adjusted hazard ratio (ahr) = 2.23 (95% ci 2.15–2.31),p < 0.001. overall,the risk of re-presentation was 37.2% (95% ci 35.6%–38.8%) in patients who were prescribed no primaquine compared to 31.6% (95% ci 30.9%–32.3%) in those prescribed either a low (≥1.5 mg/kg and <5 mg/kg) or high (≥5 mg/kg) dose of primaquine (ahr = 0.90 [95% ci 0.86–0.95,p < 0.001]). limiting the comparison to high dose versus no primaquine in the period during and 12 months before and after a large stock outage resulted in minimal change in the estimated clinical effectiveness of primaquine (ahr 0.91,95% ci 0.85–0.97,p = 0.003). our pragmatic study avoided the clinical influences associated with prospective study involvement but was subject to attrition bias caused by passive follow-up. conclusions: unsupervised primaquine for vivax malaria,prescribed according to the current world health organization guidelines,was associated with a minimal reduction in the risk of clinical recurrence within 1 year in papua,indonesia. new strategies for the effective radical cure of vivax malaria are needed in resource-poor settings. © 2017 douglas et al.
آدرس global and tropical health division,menzies school of health research,charles darwin university,darwin,nt,australia,division of infectious diseases,christchurch hospital,christchurch, New Zealand, timika malaria research program,papuan health and community development foundation,timika,papua,indonesia,department of child health,faculty of medicine,university gadjah mada,yogyakarta, Indonesia, department of child health,faculty of medicine,university gadjah mada,yogyakarta, Indonesia, centre for epidemiology and biostatistics,melbourne school of population and global health,university of melbourne,melbourne,vic,australia,victorian cytology service ltd,melbourne,vic, Australia, timika malaria research program,papuan health and community development foundation,timika,papua,indonesia,mimika district hospital,timika,papua, Indonesia, rumah sakit mitra masyarakat,timika,papua, Indonesia, centre for epidemiology and biostatistics,melbourne school of population and global health,university of melbourne,melbourne,vic, Australia, department of child health,faculty of medicine,university gadjah mada,yogyakarta, Indonesia, global and tropical health division,menzies school of health research,charles darwin university,darwin,nt, Australia, global and tropical health division,menzies school of health research,charles darwin university,darwin,nt,australia,centre for tropical medicine and global health,nuffield department of clinical medicine,university of oxford,oxford, United Kingdom
 
     
   
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