Effect of Artemether-lumefantrine Policy and Improved Vector Control on Malaria Burden in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Background: Between 1995 and 2000, KwaZulu-Natal province, South Africa, experienced a marked increase in Plasmodium falciparum malaria, fuelled by pyrethroid and sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine resistance. In response, vector control was strengthened and artemether-lumefantrine (AL) was deployed in the first Ministry of Health artemisinin-based combination treatment policy in Africa. In South Africa, effective vector and parasite control had historically ensured low-intensity malaria transmission. Malaria is diagnosed definitively and treatment is provided free of charge in reasonably accessible public-sector health-care facilities.
Methods And Findings: We reviewed four years of malaria morbidity and mortality data at four sentinel health-care facilities within KwaZulu-Natal's malaria-endemic area. In the year following improved vector control and implementation of AL treatment, malaria-related admissions and deaths both declined by 89%, and outpatient visits decreased by 85% at the sentinel facilities. By 2003, malaria-related outpatient cases and admissions had fallen by 99%, and malaria-related deaths had decreased by 97%. There was a concomitant marked and sustained decline in notified malaria throughout the province. No serious adverse events were associated causally with AL treatment in an active sentinel pharmacovigilance survey. In a prospective study with 42 d follow up, AL cured 97/98 (99%) and prevented gametocyte developing in all patients. Consistent with the findings of focus group discussions, a household survey found self-reported adherence to the six-dose AL regimen was 96%.
Conclusion: Together with concurrent strengthening of vector control measures, the antimalarial treatment policy change to AL in KwaZulu-Natal contributed to a marked and sustained decrease in malaria cases, admissions, and deaths, by greatly improving clinical and parasitological cure rates and reducing gametocyte carriage.
Nsekuye O, Malamba S, Omolo J, El-Khatib Z, Mangara J, Munyakanage D Malar J. 2024; 23(1):381.
PMID: 39696480 PMC: 11658272. DOI: 10.1186/s12936-024-05194-5.
Joda A, Ezeigwe N, Oguguo L, Taylor O, Ntadom G Malariaworld J. 2024; 6:5.
PMID: 38779625 PMC: 11107871. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.10870095.
Tola M, Oreoluwa O, Idowu E, Iyede E, Omidiji O, Awolola T Malariaworld J. 2024; 8:1.
PMID: 38596774 PMC: 11003211. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.10732924.
Gubae K, Mohammed H, Sime H, Hailgiorgis H, Mare A, Gidey B Malar J. 2023; 22(1):9.
PMID: 36611179 PMC: 9824982. DOI: 10.1186/s12936-022-04436-8.
Ebhuoma O, Gebreslasie M, Ogunsakin R Afr Health Sci. 2022; 22(2):204-215.
PMID: 36407392 PMC: 9652696. DOI: 10.4314/ahs.v22i2.24.