Malaria incidence in children in South-West Burkina Faso: comparison of active and passive case detection methods.

The aim of this study was to determine the incidence and seasonal pattern of malaria in children in South-West Burkina Faso, and to compare, in a randomized trial, characteristics of cases detected by active and passive surveillance. This study also enabled the planning of a malaria vaccine trial.Ho...

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Main Authors: Alfred B Tiono, David T Kangoye, Andrea M Rehman, Désiré G Kargougou, Youssouf Kaboré, Amidou Diarra, Esperance Ouedraogo, Issa Nébié, Alphonse Ouédraogo, Brenda Okech, Paul Milligan, Sodiomon B Sirima
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3901722?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-52190321047f4aa5a93c0c0c47aad0542020-11-25T01:46:07ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0191e8693610.1371/journal.pone.0086936Malaria incidence in children in South-West Burkina Faso: comparison of active and passive case detection methods.Alfred B TionoDavid T KangoyeAndrea M RehmanDésiré G KargougouYoussouf KaboréAmidou DiarraEsperance OuedraogoIssa NébiéAlphonse OuédraogoBrenda OkechPaul MilliganSodiomon B SirimaThe aim of this study was to determine the incidence and seasonal pattern of malaria in children in South-West Burkina Faso, and to compare, in a randomized trial, characteristics of cases detected by active and passive surveillance. This study also enabled the planning of a malaria vaccine trial.Households with young children, located within 5 kilometers of a health facility, were randomized to one of two malaria surveillance methods. In the first group, children were monitored actively. Each child was visited twice weekly; tympanic temperature was measured, and if the child had a fever or history of fever, a malaria rapid diagnostic test was performed and a blood smear collected. In the second group, children were monitored passively. The child's parent or caregiver was asked to bring the child to the nearest clinic if he was unwell. Follow up lasted 13 months from September 2009.Incidence of malaria (Fever with parasitaemia ≥5,000/µL) was 1.18 episodes/child/year in the active cohort and 0.89 in the passive cohort (rate ratio 1.32, 95% CI 1.13-1.54). Malaria cases in the passive cohort were more likely to have high grade fever; but parasite densities were similar in the two groups. Incidence was highly seasonal; when a specific case definition was used, about 60% of cases occurred within the 4 months June-September.Passive case detection required at least a 30%-40% increase in the sample size for vaccine trials, compared to active detection, to achieve the same power. However we did not find any evidence that parasite densities were higher with passive than with active detection. The incidence of malaria is highly seasonal and meets the WHO criteria for Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention (SMC). At least half of the malaria cases in these children could potentially be prevented if SMC was effectively deployed.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3901722?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alfred B Tiono
David T Kangoye
Andrea M Rehman
Désiré G Kargougou
Youssouf Kaboré
Amidou Diarra
Esperance Ouedraogo
Issa Nébié
Alphonse Ouédraogo
Brenda Okech
Paul Milligan
Sodiomon B Sirima
spellingShingle Alfred B Tiono
David T Kangoye
Andrea M Rehman
Désiré G Kargougou
Youssouf Kaboré
Amidou Diarra
Esperance Ouedraogo
Issa Nébié
Alphonse Ouédraogo
Brenda Okech
Paul Milligan
Sodiomon B Sirima
Malaria incidence in children in South-West Burkina Faso: comparison of active and passive case detection methods.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Alfred B Tiono
David T Kangoye
Andrea M Rehman
Désiré G Kargougou
Youssouf Kaboré
Amidou Diarra
Esperance Ouedraogo
Issa Nébié
Alphonse Ouédraogo
Brenda Okech
Paul Milligan
Sodiomon B Sirima
author_sort Alfred B Tiono
title Malaria incidence in children in South-West Burkina Faso: comparison of active and passive case detection methods.
title_short Malaria incidence in children in South-West Burkina Faso: comparison of active and passive case detection methods.
title_full Malaria incidence in children in South-West Burkina Faso: comparison of active and passive case detection methods.
title_fullStr Malaria incidence in children in South-West Burkina Faso: comparison of active and passive case detection methods.
title_full_unstemmed Malaria incidence in children in South-West Burkina Faso: comparison of active and passive case detection methods.
title_sort malaria incidence in children in south-west burkina faso: comparison of active and passive case detection methods.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description The aim of this study was to determine the incidence and seasonal pattern of malaria in children in South-West Burkina Faso, and to compare, in a randomized trial, characteristics of cases detected by active and passive surveillance. This study also enabled the planning of a malaria vaccine trial.Households with young children, located within 5 kilometers of a health facility, were randomized to one of two malaria surveillance methods. In the first group, children were monitored actively. Each child was visited twice weekly; tympanic temperature was measured, and if the child had a fever or history of fever, a malaria rapid diagnostic test was performed and a blood smear collected. In the second group, children were monitored passively. The child's parent or caregiver was asked to bring the child to the nearest clinic if he was unwell. Follow up lasted 13 months from September 2009.Incidence of malaria (Fever with parasitaemia ≥5,000/µL) was 1.18 episodes/child/year in the active cohort and 0.89 in the passive cohort (rate ratio 1.32, 95% CI 1.13-1.54). Malaria cases in the passive cohort were more likely to have high grade fever; but parasite densities were similar in the two groups. Incidence was highly seasonal; when a specific case definition was used, about 60% of cases occurred within the 4 months June-September.Passive case detection required at least a 30%-40% increase in the sample size for vaccine trials, compared to active detection, to achieve the same power. However we did not find any evidence that parasite densities were higher with passive than with active detection. The incidence of malaria is highly seasonal and meets the WHO criteria for Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention (SMC). At least half of the malaria cases in these children could potentially be prevented if SMC was effectively deployed.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3901722?pdf=render
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