Addressing health equity for breastfeeding women: primaquine for Plasmodium vivax radical cure

Abstract Plasmodium vivax malaria remains a global health challenge, with approximately 6.9 million estimated cases in 2022. The parasite has a dormant liver stage, the hypnozoite, which reactivates to cause repeated relapses over weeks, months, or years. These relapses erode patient health, contrib...

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Published in:Malaria Journal
Main Authors: Nada Abla, Anne Claire Marrast, Elodie Jambert, Naomi Richardson, Stephan Duparc, Lisa Almond, Karen Rowland Yeo, Xian Pan, Joel Tarning, Ping Zhao, Janice Culpepper, Catriona Waitt, Charlotte Koldeweij, Susan Cole, Andrew S. Butler, Sonia Khier, Jörg J. Möhrle, Myriam El Gaaloul
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BMC 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-024-05112-9
https://doaj.org/article/45b60ab3d99845c694b1be738e16f7c1
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author Nada Abla
Anne Claire Marrast
Elodie Jambert
Naomi Richardson
Stephan Duparc
Lisa Almond
Karen Rowland Yeo
Xian Pan
Joel Tarning
Ping Zhao
Janice Culpepper
Catriona Waitt
Charlotte Koldeweij
Susan Cole
Andrew S. Butler
Sonia Khier
Jörg J. Möhrle
Myriam El Gaaloul
author_facet Nada Abla
Anne Claire Marrast
Elodie Jambert
Naomi Richardson
Stephan Duparc
Lisa Almond
Karen Rowland Yeo
Xian Pan
Joel Tarning
Ping Zhao
Janice Culpepper
Catriona Waitt
Charlotte Koldeweij
Susan Cole
Andrew S. Butler
Sonia Khier
Jörg J. Möhrle
Myriam El Gaaloul
author_sort Nada Abla
collection Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
container_issue 1
container_title Malaria Journal
container_volume 23
description Abstract Plasmodium vivax malaria remains a global health challenge, with approximately 6.9 million estimated cases in 2022. The parasite has a dormant liver stage, the hypnozoite, which reactivates to cause repeated relapses over weeks, months, or years. These relapses erode patient health, contribute to the burden of malaria, and promote transmission. Radical cure to prevent relapses requires administration of an 8-aminoquinoline, either primaquine or tafenoquine. However, malaria treatment guidelines updated by the World Health Organization (WHO) in October 2023 restrict primaquine use for women breastfeeding children < 6 months of age, or women breastfeeding older children if their child is G6PD deficient or if the child’s G6PD status is unknown. Primaquine restrictions assume that 8-aminoquinoline exposures in breast milk would be sufficient to cause haemolysis in the nursing infant should they be G6PD deficient. WHO recommendations for tafenoquine are awaited. Notably, the WHO recommends that infants are breastfed for the first 2 years of life, and exclusively until 6 months old. Repeated pregnancies, followed by extended breastfeeding leaves women in P. vivax endemic regions potentially vulnerable to relapses for many years. This puts women’s health at risk, increases the malaria burden, and perpetuates transmission, hindering malaria control and elimination. The benefits of lifting restrictions on primaquine administration to breastfeeding women are significant, avoiding the adverse consequences of repeated episodes of acute malaria, such as severe anaemia. Recent data challenge the restriction of primaquine in breastfeeding women. Clinical pharmacokinetic data in breastfeeding infants ≥ 28 days old show that the exposure to primaquine is very low and less than 1% of the maternal exposure, indicating negligible risk to infants, irrespective of their G6PD status. Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modelling complements the clinical data, predicting minimal primaquine exposure to infants and neonates ...
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spelling ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:45b60ab3d99845c694b1be738e16f7c1 2025-01-16T20:49:30+00:00 Addressing health equity for breastfeeding women: primaquine for Plasmodium vivax radical cure Nada Abla Anne Claire Marrast Elodie Jambert Naomi Richardson Stephan Duparc Lisa Almond Karen Rowland Yeo Xian Pan Joel Tarning Ping Zhao Janice Culpepper Catriona Waitt Charlotte Koldeweij Susan Cole Andrew S. Butler Sonia Khier Jörg J. Möhrle Myriam El Gaaloul 2024-09-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-024-05112-9 https://doaj.org/article/45b60ab3d99845c694b1be738e16f7c1 EN eng BMC https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-024-05112-9 https://doaj.org/toc/1475-2875 https://doaj.org/article/45b60ab3d99845c694b1be738e16f7c1 Malaria Journal, Vol 23, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2024) Plasmodium vivax Radical cure Primaquine Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modelling Breastfeeding Pregnancy Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine RC955-962 Infectious and parasitic diseases RC109-216 article 2024 ftdoajarticles https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-024-05112-9 2024-10-02T16:07:16Z Abstract Plasmodium vivax malaria remains a global health challenge, with approximately 6.9 million estimated cases in 2022. The parasite has a dormant liver stage, the hypnozoite, which reactivates to cause repeated relapses over weeks, months, or years. These relapses erode patient health, contribute to the burden of malaria, and promote transmission. Radical cure to prevent relapses requires administration of an 8-aminoquinoline, either primaquine or tafenoquine. However, malaria treatment guidelines updated by the World Health Organization (WHO) in October 2023 restrict primaquine use for women breastfeeding children < 6 months of age, or women breastfeeding older children if their child is G6PD deficient or if the child’s G6PD status is unknown. Primaquine restrictions assume that 8-aminoquinoline exposures in breast milk would be sufficient to cause haemolysis in the nursing infant should they be G6PD deficient. WHO recommendations for tafenoquine are awaited. Notably, the WHO recommends that infants are breastfed for the first 2 years of life, and exclusively until 6 months old. Repeated pregnancies, followed by extended breastfeeding leaves women in P. vivax endemic regions potentially vulnerable to relapses for many years. This puts women’s health at risk, increases the malaria burden, and perpetuates transmission, hindering malaria control and elimination. The benefits of lifting restrictions on primaquine administration to breastfeeding women are significant, avoiding the adverse consequences of repeated episodes of acute malaria, such as severe anaemia. Recent data challenge the restriction of primaquine in breastfeeding women. Clinical pharmacokinetic data in breastfeeding infants ≥ 28 days old show that the exposure to primaquine is very low and less than 1% of the maternal exposure, indicating negligible risk to infants, irrespective of their G6PD status. Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modelling complements the clinical data, predicting minimal primaquine exposure to infants and neonates ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles Arctic Malaria Journal 23 1
spellingShingle Plasmodium vivax
Radical cure
Primaquine
Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modelling
Breastfeeding
Pregnancy
Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine
RC955-962
Infectious and parasitic diseases
RC109-216
Nada Abla
Anne Claire Marrast
Elodie Jambert
Naomi Richardson
Stephan Duparc
Lisa Almond
Karen Rowland Yeo
Xian Pan
Joel Tarning
Ping Zhao
Janice Culpepper
Catriona Waitt
Charlotte Koldeweij
Susan Cole
Andrew S. Butler
Sonia Khier
Jörg J. Möhrle
Myriam El Gaaloul
Addressing health equity for breastfeeding women: primaquine for Plasmodium vivax radical cure
title Addressing health equity for breastfeeding women: primaquine for Plasmodium vivax radical cure
title_full Addressing health equity for breastfeeding women: primaquine for Plasmodium vivax radical cure
title_fullStr Addressing health equity for breastfeeding women: primaquine for Plasmodium vivax radical cure
title_full_unstemmed Addressing health equity for breastfeeding women: primaquine for Plasmodium vivax radical cure
title_short Addressing health equity for breastfeeding women: primaquine for Plasmodium vivax radical cure
title_sort addressing health equity for breastfeeding women: primaquine for plasmodium vivax radical cure
topic Plasmodium vivax
Radical cure
Primaquine
Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modelling
Breastfeeding
Pregnancy
Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine
RC955-962
Infectious and parasitic diseases
RC109-216
topic_facet Plasmodium vivax
Radical cure
Primaquine
Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modelling
Breastfeeding
Pregnancy
Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine
RC955-962
Infectious and parasitic diseases
RC109-216
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-024-05112-9
https://doaj.org/article/45b60ab3d99845c694b1be738e16f7c1