Back to Search Start Over

The effect of dosing strategies on the therapeutic efficacy of artesunate-amodiaquine for uncomplicated malaria: a meta-analysis of individual patient data.

Authors :
Adjuik MA
Allan R
Anvikar AR
Ashley EA
Ba MS
Barennes H
Barnes KI
Bassat Q
Baudin E
Björkman A
Bompart F
Bonnet M
Borrmann S
Brasseur P
Bukirwa H
Checchi F
Cot M
Dahal P
D'Alessandro U
Deloron P
Desai M
Diap G
Djimde AA
Dorsey G
Doumbo OK
Espié E
Etard JF
Fanello CI
Faucher JF
Faye B
Flegg JA
Gaye O
Gething PW
González R
Grandesso F
Guerin PJ
Guthmann JP
Hamour S
Hasugian AR
Hay SI
Humphreys GS
Jullien V
Juma E
Kamya MR
Karema C
Kiechel JR
Kremsner PG
Krishna S
Lameyre V
Ibrahim LM
Lee SJ
Lell B
Mårtensson A
Massougbodji A
Menan H
Ménard D
Menéndez C
Meremikwu M
Moreira C
Nabasumba C
Nambozi M
Ndiaye JL
Nikiema F
Nsanzabana C
Ntoumi F
Ogutu BR
Olliaro P
Osorio L
Ouédraogo JB
Penali LK
Pene M
Pinoges L
Piola P
Price RN
Roper C
Rosenthal PJ
Rwagacondo CE
Same-Ekobo A
Schramm B
Seck A
Sharma B
Sibley CH
Sinou V
Sirima SB
Smith JJ
Smithuis F
Somé FA
Sow D
Staedke SG
Stepniewska K
Swarthout TD
Sylla K
Talisuna AO
Tarning J
Taylor WR
Temu EA
Thwing JI
Tjitra E
Tine RC
Tinto H
Vaillant MT
Valecha N
Van den Broek I
White NJ
Yeka A
Zongo I
Source :
BMC medicine [BMC Med] 2015 Mar 31; Vol. 13, pp. 66. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Mar 31.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background: Artesunate-amodiaquine (AS-AQ) is one of the most widely used artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) to treat uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria in Africa. We investigated the impact of different dosing strategies on the efficacy of this combination for the treatment of falciparum malaria.<br />Methods: Individual patient data from AS-AQ clinical trials were pooled using the WorldWide Antimalarial Resistance Network (WWARN) standardised methodology. Risk factors for treatment failure were identified using a Cox regression model with shared frailty across study sites.<br />Results: Forty-three studies representing 9,106 treatments from 1999-2012 were included in the analysis; 4,138 (45.4%) treatments were with a fixed dose combination with an AQ target dose of 30 mg/kg (FDC), 1,293 (14.2%) with a non-fixed dose combination with an AQ target dose of 25 mg/kg (loose NFDC-25), 2,418 (26.6%) with a non-fixed dose combination with an AQ target dose of 30 mg/kg (loose NFDC-30), and the remaining 1,257 (13.8%) with a co-blistered non-fixed dose combination with an AQ target dose of 30 mg/kg (co-blistered NFDC). The median dose of AQ administered was 32.1 mg/kg [IQR: 25.9-38.2], the highest dose being administered to patients treated with co-blistered NFDC (median = 35.3 mg/kg [IQR: 30.6-43.7]) and the lowest to those treated with loose NFDC-25 (median = 25.0 mg/kg [IQR: 22.7-25.0]). Patients treated with FDC received a median dose of 32.4 mg/kg [IQR: 27-39.0]. After adjusting for reinfections, the corrected antimalarial efficacy on day 28 after treatment was similar for co-blistered NFDC (97.9% [95% confidence interval (CI): 97.0-98.8%]) and FDC (98.1% [95% CI: 97.6%-98.5%]; P = 0.799), but significantly lower for the loose NFDC-25 (93.4% [95% CI: 91.9%-94.9%]), and loose NFDC-30 (95.0% [95% CI: 94.1%-95.9%]) (P < 0.001 for all comparisons). After controlling for age, AQ dose, baseline parasitemia and region; treatment with loose NFDC-25 was associated with a 3.5-fold greater risk of recrudescence by day 28 (adjusted hazard ratio, AHR = 3.51 [95% CI: 2.02-6.12], P < 0.001) compared to FDC, and treatment with loose NFDC-30 was associated with a higher risk of recrudescence at only three sites.<br />Conclusions: There was substantial variation in the total dose of amodiaquine administered in different AS-AQ combination regimens. Fixed dose AS-AQ combinations ensure optimal dosing and provide higher antimalarial treatment efficacy than the loose individual tablets in all age categories.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1741-7015
Volume :
13
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BMC medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25888957
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-015-0301-z