Four Artemisinin-Based Treatments in African Pregnant Women with Malaria

Mar 11, 2016The New England journal of medicine

Four Artemisinin-Based Malaria Treatments in Pregnant African Women

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Abstract

The PCR-adjusted cure rate for dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine was 99.2% in pregnant women treated for malaria.

  • Cure rates varied among treatment groups, with amodiaquine-artesunate at 98.5% and mefloquine-artesunate at 96.8%.
  • Artemether-lumefantrine had a significantly lower cure rate of 94.8% compared to the other treatments, but this difference was within a 5-percentage-point margin for equivalence.
  • The unadjusted cure rate for artemether-lumefantrine (52.5%) was significantly lower than that of amodiaquine-artesunate (82.3%), dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (86.9%), and mefloquine-artesunate (73.8%).
  • Serious adverse events and birth outcomes did not show significant differences across treatment groups.
  • Drug-related side effects were significantly more common in the mefloquine-artesunate (50.6%) and amodiaquine-artesunate (48.5%) groups compared to dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (20.6%) and artemether-lumefantrine (11.5%).

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