Perennial malaria chemoprevention with and without malaria vaccination to reduce malaria burden in young children: a modeling analysis

Author:

Runge Manuela1,Stahlfeld Anne1,Ambrose Monique2,Toh Kok Ben1,Rahman Semiu3,Omoniwa Omowunmi F.3,Bever Caitlin A.2,Oresanya Olusola3,Uhomoibhi Perpetua4,Galatas Beatriz5,Tibenderana James K.6,Gerardin Jaline1

Affiliation:

1. Northwestern University

2. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

3. Malaria Consortium Nigeria

4. National Malaria Elimination Programme, Federal Ministry of Health

5. World Health Organization

6. Malaria Consortium Headquarters

Abstract

Abstract Background: A recent WHO recommendation for perennial malaria chemoprevention (PMC) encourages countries to adapt dose timing and number to local conditions. However, knowledge gaps on the epidemiological impact of PMC and possible combination with the malaria vaccine RTS,S hinder informed policy decisions in countries where malaria burden in young children remains high. Methods: We used the EMOD malaria model to predict the impact of PMC with and without RTS,S on clinical and severe malaria cases in children under the age of two years (U2). PMC and RTS,S effect sizes were fit to trial data. We simulated PMC with three to seven doses (PMC-3-7) before the age of eighteen months and RTS,S with three doses, shown to be effective at nine months. We ran simulations across transmission intensities of one to 128 infectious bites per person per year, corresponding to incidences of <1 to 5500 cases per 1000 population U2. Intervention coverage was either set to 80% or based on 2018 household survey data for Southern Nigeria as a sample use case. The protective efficacy (PE) for clinical and severe cases in children U2 was calculated in comparison to no PMC and no RTS,S. Results: The projected impact of PMC or RTS,S was greater at moderate to high transmission than at low or very high transmission. Across the simulated transmission levels, PE estimates of PMC-3 at 80% coverage ranged from 5.7 to 8.8% for clinical, and from 6.1 to 13.6% for severe malaria (PE of RTS,S 10-32% and 24.6-27.5% for clinical and severe malaria respectively. In children U2, PMC with seven doses nearly averted as many cases as RTS,S, while the combination of both was more impactful than either intervention alone. When operational coverage, as seen in Southern Nigeria, increased to a hypothetical target of 80%, cases were reduced beyond the relative increase in coverage. Conclusions: PMC can substantially reduce clinical and severe cases in the first two years of life in areas with high malaria burden and perennial transmission. A better understanding of the malaria risk profile by age in early childhood and on feasible coverage by age, is needed for selecting an appropriate PMC schedule in a given setting.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference64 articles.

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3. Evaluation of health system readiness and coverage of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in infants (IPTi) in Kambia district to inform national scale-up in Sierra Leone;Lahuerta M;Malar J,2021

4. WHO Guidelines for malaria, 16 Feb 2021. Geneva: World Health Organization. ; 2021 (WHO/UCN/GMP/2021.01). Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO.

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