Cargando…

What would PCR assessment change in the management of fevers in a malaria endemic area? A school-based study in Benin in children with and without fever

BACKGROUND: A recent school-based study in Benin showed that applying a policy of anti-malarial prescriptions restricted to parasitologically-confirmed cases on the management of fever is safe and feasible. Additional PCR data were analysed in order to touch patho-physiological issues, such as the u...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Faucher, Jean-François, Aubouy, Agnès, Béhéton, Todoégnon, Makoutode, Patrick, Abiou, Grace, Doritchamou, Justin, Houzé, Pascal, Ouendo, Edgard, Deloron, Philippe, Cot, Michel
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2925366/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20691048
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-224
_version_ 1782185671933296640
author Faucher, Jean-François
Aubouy, Agnès
Béhéton, Todoégnon
Makoutode, Patrick
Abiou, Grace
Doritchamou, Justin
Houzé, Pascal
Ouendo, Edgard
Deloron, Philippe
Cot, Michel
author_facet Faucher, Jean-François
Aubouy, Agnès
Béhéton, Todoégnon
Makoutode, Patrick
Abiou, Grace
Doritchamou, Justin
Houzé, Pascal
Ouendo, Edgard
Deloron, Philippe
Cot, Michel
author_sort Faucher, Jean-François
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A recent school-based study in Benin showed that applying a policy of anti-malarial prescriptions restricted to parasitologically-confirmed cases on the management of fever is safe and feasible. Additional PCR data were analysed in order to touch patho-physiological issues, such as the usefulness of PCR in the management of malaria in an endemic area or the triggering of a malaria attack in children with submicroscopic malaria. METHODS: PCR data were prospectively collected in the setting of an exposed (with fever)/non exposed (without fever) study design. All children had a negative malaria rapid diagnostic test (RDT) at baseline, were followed up to day 14 and did not receive drugs with anti-malarial activity. The index group was defined by children with fever at baseline and the control group by children without fever at baseline. Children with submicroscopic malaria in these two groups were defined by a positive PCR at baseline. RESULTS: PCR was positive in 66 (27%) children of the index group and in 104 (44%) children of the control group respectively. The only significant factor positively related to PCR positivity at baseline was the clinical status (control group). When definition of malaria attacks included PCR results, no difference of malaria incidence was observed between the index and control groups, neither in the whole cohort, nor in children with submicroscopic malaria. The rate of undiagnosed malaria at baseline was estimated to 3.7% at baseline in the index group. CONCLUSIONS: Treating all children with fever and a positive PCR would have led to a significant increase of anti-malarial consumption, with few benefits in terms of clinical events. Non malarial fevers do not or do not frequently trigger malaria attacks in children with submicroscopic malaria.
format Text
id pubmed-2925366
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-29253662010-08-24 What would PCR assessment change in the management of fevers in a malaria endemic area? A school-based study in Benin in children with and without fever Faucher, Jean-François Aubouy, Agnès Béhéton, Todoégnon Makoutode, Patrick Abiou, Grace Doritchamou, Justin Houzé, Pascal Ouendo, Edgard Deloron, Philippe Cot, Michel Malar J Research BACKGROUND: A recent school-based study in Benin showed that applying a policy of anti-malarial prescriptions restricted to parasitologically-confirmed cases on the management of fever is safe and feasible. Additional PCR data were analysed in order to touch patho-physiological issues, such as the usefulness of PCR in the management of malaria in an endemic area or the triggering of a malaria attack in children with submicroscopic malaria. METHODS: PCR data were prospectively collected in the setting of an exposed (with fever)/non exposed (without fever) study design. All children had a negative malaria rapid diagnostic test (RDT) at baseline, were followed up to day 14 and did not receive drugs with anti-malarial activity. The index group was defined by children with fever at baseline and the control group by children without fever at baseline. Children with submicroscopic malaria in these two groups were defined by a positive PCR at baseline. RESULTS: PCR was positive in 66 (27%) children of the index group and in 104 (44%) children of the control group respectively. The only significant factor positively related to PCR positivity at baseline was the clinical status (control group). When definition of malaria attacks included PCR results, no difference of malaria incidence was observed between the index and control groups, neither in the whole cohort, nor in children with submicroscopic malaria. The rate of undiagnosed malaria at baseline was estimated to 3.7% at baseline in the index group. CONCLUSIONS: Treating all children with fever and a positive PCR would have led to a significant increase of anti-malarial consumption, with few benefits in terms of clinical events. Non malarial fevers do not or do not frequently trigger malaria attacks in children with submicroscopic malaria. BioMed Central 2010-08-06 /pmc/articles/PMC2925366/ /pubmed/20691048 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-224 Text en Copyright ©2010 Faucher et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Faucher, Jean-François
Aubouy, Agnès
Béhéton, Todoégnon
Makoutode, Patrick
Abiou, Grace
Doritchamou, Justin
Houzé, Pascal
Ouendo, Edgard
Deloron, Philippe
Cot, Michel
What would PCR assessment change in the management of fevers in a malaria endemic area? A school-based study in Benin in children with and without fever
title What would PCR assessment change in the management of fevers in a malaria endemic area? A school-based study in Benin in children with and without fever
title_full What would PCR assessment change in the management of fevers in a malaria endemic area? A school-based study in Benin in children with and without fever
title_fullStr What would PCR assessment change in the management of fevers in a malaria endemic area? A school-based study in Benin in children with and without fever
title_full_unstemmed What would PCR assessment change in the management of fevers in a malaria endemic area? A school-based study in Benin in children with and without fever
title_short What would PCR assessment change in the management of fevers in a malaria endemic area? A school-based study in Benin in children with and without fever
title_sort what would pcr assessment change in the management of fevers in a malaria endemic area? a school-based study in benin in children with and without fever
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2925366/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20691048
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-224
work_keys_str_mv AT faucherjeanfrancois whatwouldpcrassessmentchangeinthemanagementoffeversinamalariaendemicareaaschoolbasedstudyinbenininchildrenwithandwithoutfever
AT aubouyagnes whatwouldpcrassessmentchangeinthemanagementoffeversinamalariaendemicareaaschoolbasedstudyinbenininchildrenwithandwithoutfever
AT behetontodoegnon whatwouldpcrassessmentchangeinthemanagementoffeversinamalariaendemicareaaschoolbasedstudyinbenininchildrenwithandwithoutfever
AT makoutodepatrick whatwouldpcrassessmentchangeinthemanagementoffeversinamalariaendemicareaaschoolbasedstudyinbenininchildrenwithandwithoutfever
AT abiougrace whatwouldpcrassessmentchangeinthemanagementoffeversinamalariaendemicareaaschoolbasedstudyinbenininchildrenwithandwithoutfever
AT doritchamoujustin whatwouldpcrassessmentchangeinthemanagementoffeversinamalariaendemicareaaschoolbasedstudyinbenininchildrenwithandwithoutfever
AT houzepascal whatwouldpcrassessmentchangeinthemanagementoffeversinamalariaendemicareaaschoolbasedstudyinbenininchildrenwithandwithoutfever
AT ouendoedgard whatwouldpcrassessmentchangeinthemanagementoffeversinamalariaendemicareaaschoolbasedstudyinbenininchildrenwithandwithoutfever
AT deloronphilippe whatwouldpcrassessmentchangeinthemanagementoffeversinamalariaendemicareaaschoolbasedstudyinbenininchildrenwithandwithoutfever
AT cotmichel whatwouldpcrassessmentchangeinthemanagementoffeversinamalariaendemicareaaschoolbasedstudyinbenininchildrenwithandwithoutfever