WHO should accelerate, not stall, rectal artesunate deployment for pre-referral treatment of severe malaria

Author:

Peto Thomas J12ORCID,Watson James A12ORCID,White Nicholas J12ORCID,Dondorp Arjen M12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University , Bangkok , Thailand

2. Centre for Global Health and Tropical Medicine, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford , UK

Abstract

ABSTRACT The recent World Health Organization moratorium on rectal artesunate (RAS) for pre-referral treatment of severe childhood malaria is costing young lives. The decision was based on disappointing findings from a large observational study that provided RAS to community health workers with little training and supervision. This non-randomized, operational research has provided useful information to guide the implementation of RAS but is subject to bias and confounding and cannot be used to assess treatment effects. Parenteral artesunate reduces severe malaria mortality and a large body of evidence also shows RAS has lifesaving efficacy. There is now more than a decade of delay in conducting the necessary engagement and training required for successful deployment of RAS. Further delays will result in more preventable deaths.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine,Parasitology

Reference13 articles.

1. Pre-referral rectal artesunate to prevent death and disability in severe malaria: a placebo-controlled trial;Gomes;Lancet,2009

2. What Africa can do to accelerate and sustain progress against malaria;Okumu,2022

3. The magic of randomization versus the myth of real-world evidence;Collins;N Engl J Med,2020

4. The use of rectal artesunate as a pre-referral treatment for severe P. falciparum malaria;World Health Organization,2022

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