Intermittent preventive treatment regimens for malaria in HIV-positive pregnant women

Oct 7, 2011The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Malaria prevention treatments for pregnant women with HIV given at intervals

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Abstract

Two randomized trials involving 722 HIV-positive pregnant women compared monthly regimens of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) to a standard 2-dose regimen.

  • No statistically significant differences were found between monthly SP and 2-dose SP in rates of maternal anemia, low birth weight, and neonatal mortality.
  • The monthly regimen was associated with lower levels of placental and peripheral malaria infection in first-time and second-time pregnant women.
  • Babies born to first-time and second-time pregnant women on monthly SP had a higher mean birth weight compared to those on the 2-dose regimen.
  • Multigravidae women treated with monthly SP had higher hemoglobin levels than those treated with the 2-dose regimen.
  • There is a need for new drugs and research since SP cannot be given alongside co-trimoxazole, which is often used for HIV infection prophylaxis.

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Full Text

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