Willilo Ritha A, Molteni Fabrizio, Mandike Renata, Mugalura Frances E, Mutafungwa Anold, Thadeo Adella, Benedictor Edwin, Kafuko Jessica M, Kaspar Naomi, Ramsan Mahdi M, Mwaipape Osia, McElroy Peter D, Gutman Julie, Colaco Rajeev, Reithinger Richard, Ngondi Jeremiah M
RTI International, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
National Malaria Control Programme, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Malar J. 2016 Jul 29;15(1):392. doi: 10.1186/s12936-016-1441-0.
As malaria control interventions are scaled-up, rational approaches are needed for monitoring impact over time. One proposed approach includes monitoring the prevalence of malaria infection among pregnant women and children at the time of routine preventive health facility (HF) visits. This pilot explored the feasibility and utility of tracking the prevalence of malaria infection in pregnant women attending their first antenatal care (ANC) visit and infants presenting at 9-12 months of age for measles vaccination.
Pregnant women attending first ANC and infants nine to 12 months old presenting for measles vaccination at a non-probability sample of 54 HFs in Tanzania's Lake Zone (Mara, Mwanza and Kagera Regions) were screened for malaria infection using a malaria rapid diagnostic test (RDT) from December 2012 to November 2013, regardless of symptoms. Participants who tested positive were treated for malaria per national guidelines. Data were collected monthly.
Overall 89.9 and 78.1 % of expected monthly reports on malaria infection prevalence were received for pregnant women and infants, respectively. Among 51,467 pregnant women and 35,155 infants attending routine preventive HF visits, 41.2 and 37.3 % were tested with RDT, respectively. Malaria infection prevalence was 12.8 % [95 % confidence interval (CI) 11.3-14.3] among pregnant women and 11.0 % (95 % CI 9.5-12.5) among infants, and varied by month. There was good correlation of the prevalence of malaria among pregnant women and infants at the HF level (Spearman rho = 0.6; p < 0.001). This approach is estimated to cost $1.28 for every person tested, with the RDT accounting for 72 % of the cost.
Malaria infection was common and well correlated among pregnant women and infants attending routine health services. Routine screening of these readily accessible populations may offer a practical strategy for continuously tracking malaria trends, particularly seasonal variation. Positivity rates among afebrile individuals presenting for routine care offer an advantage as they are unaffected by the prevalence of other causes of febrile illness, which could influence positivity rates among febrile patients presenting to outpatient clinics. The data presented here suggest that in addition to contributing to clinical management, ongoing screening of pregnant women could be used for routine surveillance and detection of hotspots.
随着疟疾控制干预措施的扩大,需要合理的方法来长期监测其影响。一种提议的方法包括在常规预防性医疗机构(HF)就诊时监测孕妇和儿童中的疟疾感染率。本试点研究探讨了追踪首次产前检查(ANC)的孕妇以及9至12月龄前来接种麻疹疫苗的婴儿中疟疾感染率的可行性和实用性。
2012年12月至2013年11月期间,在坦桑尼亚湖区(马拉、姆万扎和卡盖拉地区)54个非概率抽样的HF机构中,对首次进行ANC检查的孕妇以及9至12月龄前来接种麻疹疫苗的婴儿进行疟疾感染筛查,无论有无症状均使用疟疾快速诊断检测(RDT)。检测呈阳性的参与者按照国家指南接受疟疾治疗。每月收集数据。
孕妇和婴儿每月疟疾感染率预期报告的总体接收率分别为89.9%和78.1%。在51467名接受常规预防性HF就诊的孕妇和35155名婴儿中,分别有41.2%和37.3%接受了RDT检测。孕妇中的疟疾感染率为12.8%[95%置信区间(CI)11.3 - 14.3],婴儿中的感染率为11.0%(95%CI 9.5 - 12.5),且随月份有所变化。在HF机构层面,孕妇和婴儿中的疟疾感染率具有良好的相关性(斯皮尔曼rho = 0.6;p < 0.001)。据估计,这种方法对每个受检者的成本为1.28美元,其中RDT占成本的72%。
在接受常规卫生服务的孕妇和婴儿中,疟疾感染很常见且相关性良好。对这些易于接触的人群进行常规筛查可能为持续追踪疟疾趋势,特别是季节性变化提供一种实用策略。前来接受常规护理的无发热个体的阳性率具有优势,因为它们不受其他发热性疾病患病率的影响,而其他发热性疾病患病率可能会影响到门诊发热患者的阳性率。此处呈现的数据表明,除了有助于临床管理外,对孕妇的持续筛查还可用于常规监测和热点地区的检测。