In most areas of the world where malaria is transmitted, it is caused by drug-resistant parasites (Table 6). Antimalarial resistance has been described in all species of Plasmodium infecting humans, except P. ovale. P. falciparum resistance to most antimalarials, with the exception of artemisinin derivatives, has been documented. However, in only a few of these drugs can genetic markers of resistance be identified (Table 7). Chloroquine resistance in P. falciparum is widespread, with efficacy confined to P. falciparum-endemic areas north of the Panama Canal in Central America and the Caribbean. Mefloquine and multidrug resistance in P. falciparum is, for the most part, confined to the Thai–Burmese and Thai–Cambodian borders, along with parts of Vietnam and eastern Burma. P. falciparum resistance to quinine monotherapy has been reported in Southeast Asia, but is of little consequence when quinine is used as a component of combination therapy. Chloroquine resistance in P. vivax is mainly found in Papua New Guinea and Papua (Irian Jaya), along with other countries of Oceania such as Indonesia, East Timor, and the Solomon Islands. There have also been isolated reports of chloroquine-resistant P. vivax from the Amazonian regions of Peru, Brazil, and Guyana. Chloroquine remains an effective antimalarial for most P. vivax acquired in Southeast Asia (other than in Thailand, Korea, and Myanmar), subcontinental India, the Middle East, and Latin America. Only recently has chloroquine resistance in P. malariae from Indonesia been described (Maguire et al., 2002). To date, P. ovale remains fully sensitive to the existing antimalarial pharmacologic armamentarium. Treatment is considered to have failed if fever and parasitemia fail to resolve or recur within 14–28 days of treatment initiation. These failures may arise due to drug-resistant organisms, malabsorption of the drug (vomiting or diarrhea), or poor adherence. A full course of retreatment with an alternate regimen is indicated in these cases. If fever and parasitemia recur >2 weeks post-treatment, this likely reflects recrudescence, or reinfection in an endemic zone.
Prevention
Prevention In Travelers
Malaria is a preventable disease in travelers. A general approach to the prevention of malaria in travelers involves an assessment of individual risk, a discussion of mosquito bite avoidance measures, and the prescription of chemoprophylactic agents where appropriate.Assessment Of Individual Risk
Many factors contribute to an individual’s risk of acquiring malaria when traveling and include, but are not limited to:- Geographic destination;
- Type of travel (urban vs. rural);
- Type of accommodations (tents vs. screened rooms);
- Itinerary during travel (trekking, altitude, river or jungle exposure);
- Season of travel (wet vs. dry);
- Duration of travel (short-term vs. long-term);
- Likelihood of compliance with preventive measures.
Mosquito Bite Avoidance
Use of personal protective measures and behaviors to reduce the likelihood of being bitten by a female anopheline mosquito is key to the prevention of malaria. These measures and behaviors include, but are not limited to:- Avoidance of outdoor activity after dusk (Anopheles mosquitos bite from dusk from dawn);
- Use of long-sleeved shirts and long pants when exposure is likely;
- Use of N,N-diethyl-3-methylbenzamide (DEET)based mosquite repellants;
- Use of permethrin or other insecticide-impregnated bed net.
Chemoprophylactic Agents
Following a detailed assessment of individual risk of malaria and counseling around personal protective measures for bite avoidance, the pretravel encounter can be directed toward a needs assessment for chemoprophylaxis. In order to prescribe an appropriate agent, the travel medicine practitioner will want to determine:- If the traveler will be exposed to malaria;
- Which species of Plasmodium predominates in his or her region of travel;
- If there is likely to be drug-resistant P. falciparum at his or her destination;
- Whether or not the traveler is likely to adhere to the prescribed regimen;
- If there are any contraindications to the prescribed regimen such as pregnancy or likelihood of pregnancy;
- Whether or not the traveler will have ready access to medical attention during travel.
Prevention In Residents Of Endemic Areas
Due to the prohibitive costs and infrastructural requirements of mass prophylaxis campaigns, insecticide-treated bed nets and targeted chemoprophylaxis remain the mainstays of malaria prevention in endemic areas. Children less than 5 years of age and pregnant women are candidates for intermittent preventive therapy (IPT) or continuous chemoprophylaxis. IPT consists of twice or thrice pre-emptive therapy during the course of pregnancy (or infancy) with an agent such as chloroquine or chloroquine-proguanil. This strategy in pregnancy reduces the risk of severe malarial anemia, low birth weight, and severe disease in pregnant women, though these benefits are largely seen in primigravidae. Insecticidetreated bed nets have been shown to significantly reduce the burden of childhood mortality secondary to malaria, and to reduce the incidence of anemia and malaria in pregnancy.Malaria Vaccine
Malaria vaccine initiatives have been ongoing for over 30 years now; however, only recently have candidate malaria vaccines been tested in humans in clinical trials. To date, investigational vaccines have been designed to target specific stages of the parasite (notably P. falciparum) life cycle, including the preerythrocytic/liver stages, asexual erythrocytic stages, sexual blood stages, and mosquito stages. The complexity of the parasite life cycle has hampered the development of successful candidate vaccines, as immunity to one life cycle stage (e.g., liver stage) confers no protection to other stages (e.g., blood stages). Natural immunity to P. falciparum is highly strain-specific and ephemeral, and requires multiple episodes of infection (boosting) to maintain both humoral and cell-mediated immunity. That P. falciparum expresses approximately 5300 antigens further hinders vaccine development, as it is currently unknown which of these antigens are key players in the genesis of immunity. One preerythrocytic stage vaccine, RTS,S/AS02, has shown promise in early clinical trials. This vaccine was designed to target the malarial circumsporozoite protein, and the vaccine antigen is comprised of a fusion protein (RTS) expressed in yeast, which binds to hepatitis B surface antigen (S) to form RTS,S. When mixed with an adjuvant, AS02, and given intramuscularly to volunteer vaccinees, RTS,S induces a high-titer antibody response to both circumsporozoite protein and hepatitis B surface antigen. In a randomized controlled trial in the Gambia, adults given three doses of RTS,S/AS02 were protected from developing natural P. falciparum malaria (Bojang et al., 2001). Vaccine efficacy was 71% in the first nine weeks of the surveillance period, and 34% during the entire 15-week surveillance period (Bojang et al., 2001). No protection was afforded by the vaccine in the final six weeks of surveillance, reiterating that immunity is very short-lived. In a follow-up study, it was shown that the protection conferred by RTS,S/AS02 was not strainspecific (Alloueche et al., 2003). Additional studies are ongoing in Mozambique. While there are many other candidate vaccines entering the early stages of clinical evaluation in humans, RTS,S/AS02 is the first to demonstrate efficacy in natural P. falciparum infection. These results are very promising, and a commercially available vaccine is on the horizon. Bibliography:- Alloueche A, Milligan P, Conway DJ, et al. (2003) Protective efficacy of the RTS,S/AS02 Plasmodium falciparum malaria vaccine is not strain specific. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 68: 97–101.
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