Long-term malaria chemoprophylaxis with mefloquine in Dutch marines in Cambodia

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Abstract

Three Dutch marine battalions (n = 2289) serving in Western Cambodia during 1992-1993 used mefloquine as weekly malaria chemoprophylaxis. One battalion started with a loading dose. Full compliance with prophylaxis was reported by 86.3%, and possible mefloquine-related adverse events were reported by 30.2%. Sixty-four periods of malaria were diagnosed in 59 marines. During deployment, 31 Plasmodium falciparum and no Plasmodium vivax infections occurred. After return, there were 11 cases of falciparum malaria and 22 of vivax malaria, 16-72 days and 30-540 days, respectively, after stopping prophylaxis. Mefloquine-resistant parasites were isolated from 4 Dutch and 4 Khmer patients. Long-term mefloquine prophylaxis was well tolerated but not totally effective.

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Hopperus Buma, A. P. C. C., Van Thiel, P. P. A. M., Lobel, H. O., Ohrt, C., Van Ameijden, E. J. C., Veltink, R. L., … Kager, P. A. (1996). Long-term malaria chemoprophylaxis with mefloquine in Dutch marines in Cambodia. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 173(6), 1506–1509. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/173.6.1506

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