Graduate Group in Applied Mathematics and Computational Science, School of Arts and Sciences, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States.
Department of Statistics, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States.
Elife. 2021 Jul 14;10:e65133. doi: 10.7554/eLife.65133.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), in 2018, an estimated 228 million malaria cases occurred worldwide with most cases occurring in sub-Saharan Africa. Scale-up of vector control tools coupled with increased access to diagnosis and effective treatment has resulted in a large decline in malaria prevalence in some areas, but other areas have seen little change. Although interventional studies demonstrate that preventing malaria during pregnancy can reduce the rate of low birth weight (i.e. child's birth weight <2500 g), it remains unknown whether natural changes in parasite transmission and malaria burden can improve birth outcomes.
We conducted an observational study of the effect of changing malaria burden on low birth weight using data from 18,112 births in 19 countries in sub-Saharan African countries during the years 2000-2015. Specifically, we conducted a difference-in-differences study via a pair-of-pairs matching approach using the fact that some sub-Saharan areas experienced sharp drops in malaria prevalence and some experienced little change.
A malaria prevalence decline from a high rate ( parasite rate in children aged 2-up-to-10 (i.e. PfPR) > 0.4) to a low rate (PfPR < 0.2) is estimated to reduce the rate of low birth weight by 1.48 percentage points (95% confidence interval: 3.70 percentage points reduction, 0.74 percentage points increase), which is a 17% reduction in the low birth weight rate compared to the average (8.6%) in our study population with observed birth weight records (1.48/8.6 ≈ 17%). When focusing on first pregnancies, a decline in malaria prevalence from high to low is estimated to have a greater impact on the low birth weight rate than for all births: 3.73 percentage points (95% confidence interval: 9.11 percentage points reduction, 1.64 percentage points increase).
Although the confidence intervals cannot rule out the possibility of no effect at the 95% confidence level, the concurrence between our primary analysis, secondary analyses, and sensitivity analyses, and the magnitude of the effect size, contribute to the weight of the evidence suggesting that declining malaria burden can potentially substantially reduce the low birth weight rate at the community level in sub-Saharan Africa, particularly among firstborns. The novel statistical methodology developed in this article-a pair-of-pairs approach to a difference-in-differences study-could be useful for many settings in which different units are observed at different times.
Ryan A. Simmons is supported by National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (UL1TR002553). The funder had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.
根据世界卫生组织(WHO)的数据,2018 年全球估计有 2.28 亿例疟疾病例,大多数病例发生在撒哈拉以南非洲。随着媒介控制工具的广泛应用以及诊断和有效治疗方法的普及,一些地区的疟疾发病率大幅下降,但其他地区的情况变化不大。虽然干预性研究表明,在怀孕期间预防疟疾可以降低低出生体重(即儿童出生体重<2500 克)的发生率,但目前尚不清楚寄生虫传播和疟疾负担的自然变化是否可以改善出生结局。
我们利用 2000 年至 2015 年期间撒哈拉以南非洲 19 个国家 18112 例分娩的数据,进行了一项关于疟疾负担变化对低出生体重影响的观察性研究。具体来说,我们采用了一种配对配对匹配方法的差异中差异研究,利用一些撒哈拉以南地区疟疾流行率急剧下降而另一些地区变化不大的事实。
疟疾病例流行率从高(儿童 2 至 10 岁寄生虫率(即 PfPR)>0.4)下降到低(PfPR<0.2),估计会使低出生体重率降低 1.48 个百分点(95%置信区间:降低 3.70 个百分点,增加 0.74 个百分点),与我们研究人群中观察到的出生体重记录(1.48/8.6≈17%)相比,低出生体重率降低了 17%。当重点关注第一胎时,疟疾病例流行率从高到低的下降估计对低出生体重率的影响大于所有出生:3.73 个百分点(95%置信区间:降低 9.11 个百分点,增加 1.64 个百分点)。
尽管置信区间不能排除在 95%置信水平下没有影响的可能性,但我们的主要分析、次要分析和敏感性分析以及效应大小的一致性,为以下观点提供了有力的证据,即疟疾负担的下降可能会在撒哈拉以南非洲的社区层面上大大降低低出生体重率,尤其是在第一胎中。本文开发的新颖统计方法——一种差异中差异研究的配对配对方法——可能对许多不同单位在不同时间进行观察的情况有用。
Ryan A. Simmons 得到了国家推进转化科学中心(UL1TR002553)的支持。资助者在研究设计、数据收集和解释或提交工作供发表的决定方面没有作用。