Post-malaria anemia is rare in malawian children with cerebral malaria

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Abstract

Artesunate therapy for severe malaria syndromes has been associated with post-treatment hemolysis and anemia. We defined post-malaria anemia as any decrease in hematocrit between the index hospitalization for severe malaria and 1 month after. We determined the incidence and severity of post-malaria anemia in Malawian children surviving cerebral malaria (CM) by analyzing hospital and follow-up data from a long-standing study ofCMpathogenesis. Children enrolled before 2014 and treated with quinine (N=258) were compared with those admitted in 2014 and after, and treated with artesunate (N = 235). The last hematocrit value obtained during hospitalization was compared with the 1-month post-hospitalization hematocrit value. The overall rate of a post-hospitalization decrease in hematocrit in children surviving CMwas 5.3%(11 of 235 or 4.7%for quinine, 15 of 258 or 5.8%for artesunate; odds ratio, 3.23 [0.88, 18.38]); no patients with a decrease in hematocrit were symptomatic, and none required transfusion after hospitalization. Of the 26 children who had a decrease in hematocrit 1 month after hospitalization, 23.1% had evidence of a new malaria infection. When children treated with quinine and artesunate were combined, a higher hematocrit level on admission, lower quantitative histidine-rich protein level, and splenomegaly were associated independently with post-malaria anemia. In African survivors of CM, post-malaria anemia is rare, mild, and unassociated with the anti-malarial treatment received.

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APA

Guenther, G., Saidi, A. M., Izem, R., Seydel, K., & Postels, D. G. (2021). Post-malaria anemia is rare in malawian children with cerebral malaria. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 104(6), 2146–2151. https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.20-1668

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