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Lives at Risk: Malaria in pregnancy. Malaria Epidemiology Branch, Division of Parasitic Diseases U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The burden of malaria in pregnancy. 45 million pregnancies in malarious areas; 23 million in sub-Saharan Africa
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Lives at Risk: Malaria in pregnancy Malaria Epidemiology Branch, Division of Parasitic Diseases U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
The burden of malaria in pregnancy • 45 million pregnancies in malarious areas; 23 million in sub-Saharan Africa • Estimated 200,000 Low Birth Weight pregnancies/year • Placental infection contributes to: • 15% of maternal anemia • 8-14% of all low birth weight • 30% of preventable low birth weight • 3-8% of infant mortality
Malaria in Pregnancy High Transmission Areas Acquired immunity - high Asymptomatic infection • 1st & 2nd pregnancies Placental Sequestration • HIV infection extends this to all pregnancies, and makes it worse Anaemia Altered Placental Integrity Less Nutrient Transport Low Birth Weight Excess Infant Mortality
³2500 <1500 1500-1999 200-2499 Neonatal Mortality Rates by BirthweightMangochi, Malawi -- September 1987 - June 1989 1000 800 800 600 Deaths per 1000 Live Births 400 300 200 49 26 0 1.0 Relative Risk 31 11.7 2.4
Placental parasitemia by pregnancy number, Kisumu, Kenya, 1996-98 Parasite density/mm3 % parasitemic 772 402 479 Pregnancy number
Placental parasitemia by HIV status and pregnancy number, Kisumu, Kenya, 1996-98 Parasite density/mm3 % parasitemic 231 159 197 772 402 479 HIV (+) HIV (-) Total n = 2263 Summary RR = 1.63 (1.41-1.89), p<0.001
Factors Contributing to Low Birth Weight - Developing Countries Short stature Nonwhite race Malaria Maternal LBW/History LBW Small paternal size/other General morbidity Low prepregnancy wt Female sex Primiparity Low caloric intake or wt gain
Factors Contributing to Low Birth Weight – that are amenable to intervention during pregnancy General morbidity Malaria Low caloric intake or wt gain
Contribution of Prematurity and IUGR to Low Birth WeightMangochi, Malawi Normal Birthweight Prematurity NMR* 245/1000 8 82% 18% Low Birthweight IUGR NMR* 52/1000 18 All Infants N=1,618 Low Birthweight N=297 *Neonatal Mortality Rate Adapted from Steketee et al.
Frequency of Low Birth Weight by placental malaria infection,Malawi 1988-91 % Low Birth weight 35 30 25 20 Placental + 15 Placental - 10 5 0 Grav 1 Grav 2 Grav 3+
Malaria in PregnancyOpportunities for Intervention • Program opportunity • in areas of Africa with greatest LBW > 60% women attend ANC • Drugs • Intermittent Preventive Treatment (IPT) • Case Management • Insecticide Treated Nets (ITN) • Treatment of anemia • Iron/folate • Nutritional counseling
Antenatal care in AfricaProportion of Pregnant Women Seeking Antenatal Clinic Care Demographic and Health Surveys
Interventions to addressmalaria in pregnancy • Preventive intermittent treatment (PIT) • Insecticide treated nets (ITN) • Treatment and Care of acute cases of malaria during pregnancy
Preventive intermittent treatment (PIT) Providing antimalarial treatment dose at scheduled antenatal clinic visits • Shown to: • Substantial improvement in maternal anemia • >50% reduction in placental malaria rates • 20-25% reduction in low birth weight rates
Intermittent Preventive Therapy - the monthly clinic dosing strategy- Rx Rx Rx Rx 20 10 30 Quickening Conception Birth Weeks of gestation
Bednets: Birth Outcome Gravidae 1-4 ter Kuile 2001 Kenya
Impact of ITNs on maternal and infant health, western Kenya • During pregnancy • 38% reduction in peripheral parasitemia • 21% reduction in all cause anemia (Hb < 11 g/dl) • 47% reduction in severe malarial anemia • At delivery • 23% reduction in placental malaria • 28% reduction in LBW • 25% reduction in any adverse birth outcome
Interventions to address malaria in pregnancy • Intermittent preventive treatment • Insecticide-treated materials • Case management UNICEF/C-55-10/Watson
Malaria in Mothers and Infants Insecticide-treated nets IPT Non-pregnant Pregnancy Post-partum Infancy Case management
Malaria Control during PregnancyImplementation Package(s) ANC Private Sector IPT ITNs ANC Facilities Community CM
Summary • The effect of malaria during pregnancy on morbidity and mortality is: • documented; consistent across studies; amenable to interventions applied during the current pregnancy • The malaria effect is linked with anemia & HIV • Today, the tragedy rests in the failure to apply existing effective control measures