Sébastien Gaultier, Sandrine Houzé, Marc Thellier, Michael Thy, Nathan Peiffer-Smadja, Hermann Do Rego, Stéphane Jauréguiberry, Jean-François Timsit, Etienne Montmollin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Parasitemia > 4% (HP) is the most frequent severity criterion considered in adults with imported malaria, isolated hyperparasitemia (iHP) accounting for 10-40% cases. Its prognostic significance is controversial.
Methods: Multicenter retrospective study including all adult patients with imported Plasmodium falciparummalaria and HP admitted to 16 hospitals in the Greater Paris area between 2018 and 2022 and reported to the National Reference Center. Among HP patients, iHP at hospital admission was identified by retrospective analysis of medical records to minimize classification bias. The primary endpoint was a composite outcome using the Desirability of Outcome Ranking (DOOR) method with three levels of decreasing desirability: hospital survival, absence of organ support requirement, shortest length of stay. Association between HP, iHP and outcomes was evaluated by negative binomial regression models.
Results: Of 355 patients enrolled with HP, 135 (38%) had iHP. iHP patients were predominantly male (55.6%), aged 41 [32-52.3] years, and born in an endemic country (86.4%). Compared with patients with HP and additional severity criteria, iHP was independently associated with a lower risk of worse DOOR (RR 0.56, 95%CI[0.48-0.65]). No deaths were recorded in the iHP population, and 2/135 (1.5%) patients required organ support. In the iHP population, immunosuppression (RR 1.65, 95%CI[1.16-2,37]) and parasitemia>10% (RR 1.57, 95%CI[1.01-2.24]) were independently associated with worse DOOR. Only 47 (34.8%) iHP patients were admitted to an ICU at diagnosis, and 40 (29.6%) were treated with oral therapy alone.
Conclusion: In imported malaria in France, iHP was associated with a low risk of serious adverse outcomes overall. In patients with iHP, immunosuppression and parasitemia > 10% were associated with an increased risk of adverse outcome, highlighting the importance of a close hospital monitoring.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Travel Medicine is a publication that focuses on travel medicine and its intersection with other disciplines. It publishes cutting-edge research, consensus papers, policy papers, and expert reviews. The journal is affiliated with the Asia Pacific Travel Health Society.
The journal's main areas of interest include the prevention and management of travel-associated infections, non-communicable diseases, vaccines, malaria prevention and treatment, multi-drug resistant pathogens, and surveillance on all individuals crossing international borders.
The Journal of Travel Medicine is indexed in multiple major indexing services, including Adis International Ltd., CABI, EBSCOhost, Elsevier BV, Gale, Journal Watch Infectious Diseases (Online), MetaPress, National Library of Medicine, OCLC, Ovid, ProQuest, Thomson Reuters, and the U.S. National Library of Medicine.