Intermittent preventive treatment with dihydroartemisinin–piperaquine and risk of malaria following cessation in young Ugandan children: a double-blind, randomised, controlled trial

Jul 17, 2019The Lancet. Infectious diseases

Preventive malaria treatment with dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine and malaria risk after stopping in young Ugandan children

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Abstract

Among 183 children, the incidence of symptomatic malaria was significantly lower for those treated every 4 weeks compared to those treated every 12 weeks.

  • During the intervention, children treated every 4 weeks experienced 0.018 episodes of symptomatic malaria per person-year, compared to 0.39 episodes for those treated every 12 weeks.
  • After cessation of treatment, children previously on the 4-week regimen had 0.73 episodes per person-year, while those on the 12-week regimen had 1.1 episodes per person-year.
  • The incidence rate ratio for malaria episodes during the intervention was 0.041 for the 4-week group versus the 12-week group.
  • Adverse events were reported in 98% of the 4-week group and 100% of the 12-week group, with cough being the most common.
  • No severe adverse events were related to the study drug administration, and one unrelated death occurred during the intervention.

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Full Text

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