Clarke Siân E, Rouhani Saba, Diarra Seybou, Saye Renion, Bamadio Modibo, Jones Rebecca, Traore Diahara, Traore Klenon, Jukes Matthew Ch, Thuilliez Josselin, Brooker Simon, Roschnik Natalie, Sacko Moussa
Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Save the Children, Bamako, Mali.
BMJ Glob Health. 2017 Jun 28;2(2):e000182. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2016-000182. eCollection 2017.
School-aged children are rarely targeted by malaria control programmes, yet the prevalence of infection in primary school children often exceeds that seen in younger children and could affect haemoglobin concentration and school performance.
A cluster-randomised trial was carried out in 80 primary schools in southern Mali to evaluate the impact of a school-based malaria intervention package. Intervention schools received two interventions sequentially: (1) teacher-led participatory malaria prevention education, combined with distribution of long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs), followed 7 months later at the end of the transmission season by (2) mass delivery of artesunate and sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine administered by teachers, termed intermittent parasite clearance in schools (IPCs). Control schools received LLINs as part of the national universal net distribution programme. The impact of the interventions on malaria and anaemia was evaluated over 20 months using cross-sectional surveys in a random subset of 38 schools(all classes), with a range of cognitive measures (sustained attention, visual search, numeracy, vocabulary and writing) assessed in a longitudinal cohort of children aged 9-12 years in all 80 schools.
Delivery of a single round of IPCs was associated with dramatic reductions in malaria parasitaemia (OR 0.005, 95% CI 0.002 to 0.011, p<0.001) and gametocyte carriage (OR 0.02, 95% CI 0.00 to 0.17, p<0.001) in intervention compared with control schools. This effect was sustained for 6 months until the beginning of the next transmission season. IPCs was also associated with a significant decrease in anaemia (OR 0.56, 95% CI 0.40 to 0.78, p=0.001), and increase in sustained attention (difference +0.23, 95% CI 0.10 to 0.36, p<0.001). There was no evidence of impact on other cognitive measures.
The combination of malaria prevention education, LLINs and IPCs can reduce anaemia and improve sustained attention of school children in areas of highly seasonal transmission. These findings highlight the impact of asymptomatic malaria infection on cognitive performance in schoolchildren and the benefit of IPCs in reducing this burden. Additionally, malaria control in schools can help diminish the infectious reservoir that sustains transmission.
疟疾防控项目很少将学龄儿童作为目标人群,然而小学生中的感染率往往高于年幼儿童,且可能影响血红蛋白浓度和学业表现。
在马里南部的80所小学开展了一项整群随机试验,以评估一套以学校为基础的疟疾干预措施的效果。干预学校依次接受两项干预措施:(1)由教师主导的参与式疟疾预防教育,并分发长效驱虫蚊帐(LLINs),在传播季节结束7个月后,(2)由教师大规模发放青蒿琥酯和磺胺多辛-乙胺嘧啶,即学校间歇性寄生虫清除(IPCs)。对照学校接受LLINs作为国家普遍蚊帐分发计划的一部分。通过对38所学校(所有班级)的随机子集进行横断面调查,在20个月内评估干预措施对疟疾和贫血的影响,并在所有80所学校中对9至12岁儿童的纵向队列进行一系列认知测量(持续注意力、视觉搜索、算术、词汇和写作)评估。
与对照学校相比,单次IPCs与干预学校的疟疾寄生虫血症(比值比0.005,95%置信区间0.002至0.011,p<0.001)和配子体携带率(比值比0.02,95%置信区间0.00至0.17,p<0.001)大幅降低相关。这种效果持续了6个月,直到下一个传播季节开始。IPCs还与贫血显著减少(比值比0.56,95%置信区间0.40至0.78,p=0.001)以及持续注意力增加(差异+0.23,95%置信区间0.10至0.36,p<0.001)相关。没有证据表明对其他认知测量有影响。
疟疾预防教育、LLINs和IPCs相结合可以减少贫血,并提高高度季节性传播地区学童的持续注意力。这些发现凸显了无症状疟疾感染对学童认知表现的影响以及IPCs在减轻这一负担方面的益处。此外,学校疟疾防控有助于减少维持传播的感染源。