Shoklo Malaria Research Unit, Mahidol-Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University, Mae Sot, Thailand.
Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
BMC Med. 2023 Aug 24;21(1):320. doi: 10.1186/s12916-023-02991-8.
Severe malaria in pregnancy causes maternal mortality, morbidity, and adverse foetal outcomes. The factors contributing to adverse maternal and foetal outcomes are not well defined. We aimed to identify the factors predicting higher maternal mortality and to describe the foetal mortality and morbidity associated with severe falciparum malaria in pregnancy.
A retrospective cohort study was conducted of severe falciparum malaria in pregnancy, as defined by the World Health Organization severe malaria criteria. The patients were managed prospectively by the Shoklo Malaria Research Unit (SMRU) on the Thailand-Myanmar border or were included in hospital-based clinical trials in six Southeast Asian countries. Fixed-effects multivariable penalised logistic regression was used for analysing maternal mortality.
We included 213 (123 SMRU and 90 hospital-based) episodes of severe falciparum malaria in pregnancy managed between 1980 and 2020. The mean maternal age was 25.7 (SD 6.8) years, and the mean gestational age was 25.6 (SD 8.9) weeks. The overall maternal mortality was 12.2% (26/213). Coma (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 7.18, 95% CI 2.01-25.57, p = 0.0002), hypotension (aOR 11.21, 95%CI 1.27-98.92, p = 0.03) and respiratory failure (aOR 4.98, 95%CI 1.13-22.01, p = 0.03) were associated with maternal mortality. Pregnant women with one or more of these three criteria had a mortality of 29.1% (25/86) (95%CI 19.5 to 38.7%) whereas there were no deaths in 88 pregnant women with hyperparasitaemia (> 10% parasitised erythrocytes) only or severe anaemia (haematocrit < 20%) only. In the SMRU prospective cohort, in which the pregnant women were followed up until delivery, the risks of foetal loss (23.3% by Kaplan-Meier estimator, 25/117) and small-for-gestational-age (38.3%, 23/60) after severe malaria were high. Maternal death, foetal loss and preterm birth occurred commonly within a week of diagnosis of severe malaria.
Vital organ dysfunction in pregnant women with severe malaria was associated with a very high maternal and foetal mortality whereas severe anaemia or hyperparasitaemia alone were not associated with poor prognosis, which may explain the variation of reported mortality from severe malaria in pregnancy. Access to antenatal care must be promoted to reduce barriers to early diagnosis and treatment of both malaria and anaemia.
妊娠重症疟疾可导致孕产妇死亡、发病和不良胎儿结局。导致孕产妇和胎儿不良结局的因素尚未明确。本研究旨在确定导致更高孕产妇死亡率的因素,并描述妊娠重症疟疾相关的胎儿死亡率和发病率。
我们对妊娠重症疟疾进行了回顾性队列研究,按照世界卫生组织重症疟疾标准进行定义。在泰国-缅甸边境的肖克洛疟疾研究单位(SMRU)或在东南亚六个国家的基于医院的临床试验中,前瞻性地管理这些患者。采用固定效应多变量惩罚逻辑回归分析孕产妇死亡率。
我们纳入了 1980 年至 2020 年期间管理的 213 例(123 例 SMRU 和 90 例基于医院)妊娠重症疟疾发作。产妇平均年龄为 25.7(6.8)岁,平均孕周为 25.6(8.9)周。总体孕产妇死亡率为 12.2%(26/213)。昏迷(调整后比值比[aOR],7.18,95%置信区间[CI]2.01-25.57,p=0.0002)、低血压(aOR 11.21,95%CI 1.27-98.92,p=0.03)和呼吸衰竭(aOR 4.98,95%CI 1.13-22.01,p=0.03)与孕产妇死亡率相关。有一个或多个这三个标准的孕妇死亡率为 29.1%(25/86)(95%CI 19.5%至 38.7%),而仅有高寄生虫血症(>10%寄生红细胞)或严重贫血(血细胞比容<20%)的 88 名孕妇无一例死亡。在 SMRU 前瞻性队列中,对孕妇进行了随访至分娩,重度疟疾后胎儿丢失(23.3%,Kaplan-Meier 估计值,25/117)和小于胎龄儿(38.3%,23/60)的风险很高。孕产妇死亡、胎儿丢失和早产通常在重度疟疾诊断后一周内发生。
妊娠重症疟疾孕妇重要器官功能障碍与孕产妇和胎儿死亡率极高相关,而单纯严重贫血或高寄生虫血症与不良预后无关,这可能解释了妊娠重症疟疾报告死亡率的差异。必须促进获得产前保健,以减少疟疾和贫血早期诊断和治疗的障碍。