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Malaria in Pregnancy. Steve Meshnick, M.D., Ph.D. Professor of Epidemiology and Microbiology. Outline. The global burden of malaria Importance of malaria in reproductive health UNC research activities. Sachs & Malaney, Nature, 2002. Malaria 2004. 90% of cases and deaths in Africa
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Malaria in Pregnancy Steve Meshnick, M.D., Ph.D. Professor of Epidemiology and Microbiology
Outline • The global burden of malaria • Importance of malaria in reproductive health • UNC research activities
Malaria 2004 • 90% of cases and deaths in Africa • >300 million cases/year • Periodic fever, chills, prostration • ~2 million deaths/year, mostly in children <5 • Cerebral malaria, severe anemia
Types of malaria • Plasmodium falciparum • Most common • Multi-drug resistant • Most dangerous • Plasmodium vivax • Latin America & Asia • Plasmodium malariae • Plasmodium ovale
sub-Saharan Africa P. falciparum Year-round transmission Incidence >1/person/yr Adults are immune Affects children < 5 & primigravidae Asia & Latin America P vivax >P. falciparum Seasonal transmission Incidence is low Little or no immunity Affects people of all ages and pregnant women of all gravidity Geography of malaria
Malaria control toolbox • Antimalarial drugs • Prophylaxis • Case management (treatment) • Intermittent Preventive Therapy • Vector control • Household spraying • Insecticide-treated bednets • Vaccine
sub-Saharan Africa Low income High transmission Sulfadoxine- pyrimethamine Presumptive therapy Case management Asia & Latin America Middle income Low transmission Artemisinin Combination Therapy Microscopy and treatment of slide-confirmed cases
Intermittent Preventive Therapy (IPT) • Areas of high transmission • Therapeutic doses of SP given periodically to all pregnant women or infants at risk • Takes advantage of • High utilization by pregnant women of antenatal clinics • High coverage of infants for EPI vaccination visits (2, 3, 9 mos)
Household spraying • Anophelines rest on walls and ceiling after blood meal • DDT is best: • Affordable, effective, safe • Requires too much infrastructure for poor countries
Insecticide Treated Nets • Bednets impregnated with permethrin insecticide • Need retreatment every 6 months • New “permanets” do not need retreatment • Act as human-baited mosquito traps and are better with high coverage • Should they be socially marketed or freely distributed?
Global efforts to control malaria • Roll Back Malaria (WHO) • Set achievable goals • Individual country plans • Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria • Gates Foundation (MMV, GAVI)
Outline • The global burden of malaria • Importance of malaria in reproductive health • UNC research activities
Malaria in pregnant women • >50 million pregnant women exposed to malaria each year • ~3.5 million pregnant women infected Poor birth outcomes Poor maternal outcomes
Placental malaria • Parasites accumulate and thrive in the placenta • Only affects primigravidae in areas of high transmission
Gravidity and malaria • Primigravidae have no pre-existing immunity to placental parasites and are highly susceptible • In high transmission areas, primigravidae develop immunity to placental parasites and are protected in subsequent pregnancies • In low transmission areas, multigravidae are unexposed and unprotected
Effects of malaria on pregnant women • Poor birth outcomes • Low birth weight due to preterm delivery (PTD) and intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) • abortions, stillbirths • Maternal outcomes • Anemia, maternal mortality
Poor birth outcomes • In African studies, malaria accounts for • 8-14% of all low birth weight • 3-8% of infant mortality (Steketee et al., Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg, 2001)
Maternal mortality • Responsible for 0.5 – 23% of maternal deaths in Africa • Malaria causes severe anemia and platelets can predispose to death from hemorrhage www.prema-eu.org
Interventions • Intermittent Preventive Therapy (IPT) • sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) • Insecticide-Treated Nets (ITNs) • RBM goals – 60% of pregnant women in endemic areas should have access to both by 2005
IPT • Malawi first to introduce (1993) • Two therapeutic doses of SP to all pregnant women at quickening and at 28-34 wks Inexpensive (~$0.20) • 2-dose coverage is still low (<25%) • New recommendations include 4-doses or monthly SP • Prevents 23-86% of severe maternal anemia
ITNs • Cost ~$4.00 • Reduce malaria, severe anemia and LBW by 30-50% • Socially marketed nets (~$1.00) • Low uptake • Freely distributed nets • High uptake and well utilized • Less sustainable
Malaria is the most common and easily preventable cause of poor birth outcomes in the world
Programmatic priorities • Integration of malaria prevention into • Reproductive health programs • Programs to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV • Increase uptake of IPT and ITNs • Make programs sustainable
Outline • The global burden of malaria • Importance of malaria in reproductive health • UNC research activities
Malawi • Population: 11 million • Per capita income: $180 • Per capita expenditure on health: $10 • Malaria prevalence 100% • HIV prevalence: 15-30% • Life expectancy: 41 yrs
Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital • QECH provides primary and secondary health services for Blantyre. • Also referral center for Southern Malawi
Pathologenesis of malaria in pregnancy • During normal pregnancy, the cellular immune response (Th1) is suppressed to prevent fetal rejection • Malaria stimulates the Th1 response intrauterine growth retardation • Malaria stimulates expression of an HIV co-receptor (CCR5) in the placenta Moormann et al., JID, 1999; Tkachuk et al., JID 2001; Abrams et al., Am. J. Reprod. Immunol., 2004
Malaria and HIV co-infections during pregnancy • Up to 10% of pregnant women may be co-infected with both HIV and malaria • HIV-infected pregnant women have more frequent and severe malaria • Malaria infection might increase mother-to-child transmission of HIV • Infant mortality rate for offspring of co-infected mothers is 3-8 fold higher than singly infected mothers
Malaria-HIV in Pregnancy study • Pre-labor • Consent • HIV Counseling & Testing • Blood for malaria, Hb, • HIV, HIV viral load, CD4 and syphilis. • Onset of Labor • Nevirapine to mother • Delivery • Nevirapine to baby • Placental blood and tissue • Birth outcome Outcome HIV status by real-time PCR at <48 hrs, 6 wks, and 12 wks
Patient characteristics 2364 asked for consent (Dec 2000- June 2002) 1662 (70.3%) consented 480 (28.9%) HIV+ve 61 (12.7%) Peripheral MPs+ 342 placental smear done 387 (80.6%) delivered 304 Placental histopathology done 39 (11.4%) Malaria + 303 Malaria - 74 (24.3%) Malaria + 230 Malaria -
Multivariate analyses • Malaria is associated with 1.7-foldincreasein peripheral HIV viral load and a 2-foldincrease in placental viral load after adjusting for CD4 cell count and hemoglobin concentrations • Since a 1-log increase in peripheral viral load is associated with a 2.5-fold increase in MTCT, then malaria might increase MTCT by 25%. Mwapasa, et al., AIDS, 2004
Does malaria promote MTCT of HIV? • Study on-going, but to date, no association between malaria and MTCT seen • Currently, only 10% power to detect the 25% difference • Indirect evidence for an effect on MTCT • Malaria viral load MTCT • Malaria fever MTCT • Malaria LBW MTCT
Public Health Implications 500,000 live births/year in Malawi: 100,000 to HIV(+) women 20,000 HIV(+) babies (if nevirapine used) • 6,000 HIV(+) babies born to malaria (+) mothers/yr Better malaria prevention could prevent 1,200 new infections
HIV and susceptibility to malaria • HIV-infected pregnant women have more frequent and severe malaria • Is the effect of HIV on malaria dependent on decreasing CD4’s or decreasing antibody?
HIV impairs immunity to malaria Mount et al., Lancet, 2004
Important issues in malaria-HIV interactions • Can prevention or treatment of malaria delay progression of HIV disease? • Does HIV affect susceptibility to malarial disease in children? • Does ART restore immunity to malaria?
IPT 2004 • 2-dose IPT with SP ineffective in HIV-infected women • SP IPT also losing effectiveness due to drug resistance • What should replace SP?
Possible alternatives to SP • SP-artesunate • SP-azithromycin • Amodiaquine • Mefloquine • Lapdap
SP vs SP-artesunate vs SP-azithromycin • Study ongoing • Expected completion of pilot (120 women) by summer 2004
Can new IPT regimens delay the onset of drug resistance? • New low-cost assays to measure malaria resistance to: • SP (Alker et al, AAC, in press) • Quinolines (Purfield et al., Malaria J, in press)
O N N H C O O C H 3 3 H N N H 2 2 New drugs for malaria • DB289 developed by Tidwell group and for treatment of African sleeping sickness (supported by Gates Foundation) • Effective in an initial trial against P. falciparum in Thailand curing >90% of patients (supported by MMV)
Summary • Malaria is an enormous reproductive health problem, especially in sub-Saharan Africa • IPT and ITNs are inexpensive and effective interventions • Investment in malaria control can do the most good for the least amount of money