Cates Jordan E, Unger Holger W, Briand Valerie, Fievet Nadine, Valea Innocent, Tinto Halidou, D'Alessandro Umberto, Landis Sarah H, Adu-Afarwuah Seth, Dewey Kathryn G, Ter Kuile Feiko O, Desai Meghna, Dellicour Stephanie, Ouma Peter, Gutman Julie, Oneko Martina, Slutsker Laurence, Terlouw Dianne J, Kariuki Simon, Ayisi John, Madanitsa Mwayiwawo, Mwapasa Victor, Ashorn Per, Maleta Kenneth, Mueller Ivo, Stanisic Danielle, Schmiegelow Christentze, Lusingu John P A, van Eijk Anna Maria, Bauserman Melissa, Adair Linda, Cole Stephen R, Westreich Daniel, Meshnick Steven, Rogerson Stephen
Department of Epidemiology, UNC-Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
PLoS Med. 2017 Aug 8;14(8):e1002373. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002373. eCollection 2017 Aug.
Four studies previously indicated that the effect of malaria infection during pregnancy on the risk of low birthweight (LBW; <2,500 g) may depend upon maternal nutritional status. We investigated this dependence further using a large, diverse study population.
We evaluated the interaction between maternal malaria infection and maternal anthropometric status on the risk of LBW using pooled data from 14,633 pregnancies from 13 studies (6 cohort studies and 7 randomized controlled trials) conducted in Africa and the Western Pacific from 1996-2015. Studies were identified by the Maternal Malaria and Malnutrition (M3) initiative using a convenience sampling approach and were eligible for pooling given adequate ethical approval and availability of essential variables. Study-specific adjusted effect estimates were calculated using inverse probability of treatment-weighted linear and log-binomial regression models and pooled using a random-effects model. The adjusted risk of delivering a baby with LBW was 8.8% among women with malaria infection at antenatal enrollment compared to 7.7% among uninfected women (adjusted risk ratio [aRR] 1.14 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.91, 1.42]; N = 13,613), 10.5% among women with malaria infection at delivery compared to 7.9% among uninfected women (aRR 1.32 [95% CI: 1.08, 1.62]; N = 11,826), and 15.3% among women with low mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC <23 cm) at enrollment compared to 9.5% among women with MUAC ≥ 23 cm (aRR 1.60 [95% CI: 1.36, 1.87]; N = 9,008). The risk of delivering a baby with LBW was 17.8% among women with both malaria infection and low MUAC at enrollment compared to 8.4% among uninfected women with MUAC ≥ 23 cm (joint aRR 2.13 [95% CI: 1.21, 3.73]; N = 8,152). There was no evidence of synergism (i.e., excess risk due to interaction) between malaria infection and MUAC on the multiplicative (p = 0.5) or additive scale (p = 0.9). Results were similar using body mass index (BMI) as an anthropometric indicator of nutritional status. Meta-regression results indicated that there may be multiplicative interaction between malaria infection at enrollment and low MUAC within studies conducted in Africa; however, this finding was not consistent on the additive scale, when accounting for multiple comparisons, or when using other definitions of malaria and malnutrition. The major limitations of the study included availability of only 2 cross-sectional measurements of malaria and the limited availability of ultrasound-based pregnancy dating to assess impacts on preterm birth and fetal growth in all studies.
Pregnant women with malnutrition and malaria infection are at increased risk of LBW compared to women with only 1 risk factor or none, but malaria and malnutrition do not act synergistically.
此前有四项研究表明,孕期疟疾感染对低出生体重(LBW;<2500克)风险的影响可能取决于孕妇的营养状况。我们使用一个规模庞大、多样化的研究群体进一步调查了这种依存关系。
我们利用1996年至2015年在非洲和西太平洋地区开展的13项研究(6项队列研究和7项随机对照试验)中14,633例妊娠的汇总数据,评估了孕妇疟疾感染与孕妇人体测量状况对低出生体重风险的相互作用。孕产妇疟疾与营养不良(M3)倡议通过便利抽样方法识别研究,这些研究在获得充分伦理批准且具备关键变量的情况下符合汇总条件。使用治疗加权线性和对数二项回归模型的逆概率计算特定研究的调整效应估计值,并使用随机效应模型进行汇总。产前登记时感染疟疾的女性中,分娩低出生体重儿的调整风险为8.8%,未感染女性为7.7%(调整风险比[aRR] 1.14 [95%置信区间(CI):0.91, 1.42];N = 13,613);分娩时感染疟疾的女性中为10.5%,未感染女性为7.9%(aRR 1.32 [95% CI:1.08, 1.62];N = 11,826);登记时上臂中段周长(MUAC<23厘米)较低的女性中为15.3%,MUAC≥23厘米的女性为9.5%(aRR 1.60 [95% CI:1.36, 1.87];N = 9,008)。登记时同时感染疟疾且MUAC较低的女性中,分娩低出生体重儿的风险为17.8%,MUAC≥23厘米的未感染女性为8.4%(联合aRR 2.13 [95% CI:1.21, 3.73];N = 8,152)。在乘法(p = 0.5)或加法尺度(p = 0.9)上,疟疾感染与MUAC之间均无协同作用证据(即因相互作用导致的额外风险)。使用体重指数(BMI)作为营养状况的人体测量指标时结果相似。Meta回归结果表明,在非洲开展的研究中,登记时的疟疾感染与低MUAC之间可能存在乘法相互作用;然而,在考虑多重比较时,或使用疟疾和营养不良的其他定义时,这一发现并不一致。该研究的主要局限性包括仅提供了疟疾的2次横断面测量数据,且在所有研究中基于超声的孕周测定有限,难以评估对早产和胎儿生长的影响。
与仅有一种风险因素或无风险因素的女性相比,营养不良且感染疟疾的孕妇分娩低出生体重儿的风险更高,但疟疾和营养不良并无协同作用。