The effect and control of malaria in pregnancy and lactating women in the Asia-Pacific region
Unger, Holger W;
Acharya, Sanjaya;
Arnold, Lachlan;
Wu, Connie;
van Eijk, Anna Maria;
Gore-Langton, Georgia R;
ter Kuile, Feiko O;
Lufele, Elvin;
Chico, R Matthew;
Price, Ric N;
+3 more...Moore, Brioni R;
Thriemer, Kamala;
Rogerson, Stephen J;
(2023)
The effect and control of malaria in pregnancy and lactating women in the Asia-Pacific region.
The Lancet Global health, 11 (11).
e1805-e1818.
ISSN 2214-109X
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/s2214-109x(23)00415-1
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Half of all pregnancies at risk of malaria worldwide occur in the Asia–Pacific region, where Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax co-exist. Despite substantial reductions in transmission, malaria remains an important cause of adverse health outcomes for mothers and offspring, including pre-eclampsia. Malaria transmission is heterogeneous, and infections are commonly subpatent and asymptomatic. High-grade antimalarial resistance poses a formidable challenge to malaria control in pregnancy in the region. Intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy reduces infection risk in meso-endemic New Guinea, whereas screen-and-treat strategies will require more sensitive point-of-care tests to control malaria in pregnancy. In the first trimester, artemether–lumefantrine is approved, and safety data are accumulating for other artemisinin-based combinations. Safety of novel antimalarials to treat artemisinin-resistant P falciparum during pregnancy, and of 8-aminoquinolines during lactation, needs to be established. A more systematic approach to the prevention of malaria in pregnancy in the Asia–Pacific is required.