1727CHAPTER 224 Malaria
A B C
D E F
FIGURE 224-4 Thin blood films of Plasmodium falciparum. A. Young trophozoite. B. Old trophozoite. C. Trophozoites in erythrocytes and pigment in polymorphonuclear cells.
D. Mature schizont. E. Female gametocyte. F. Male gametocyte. (Reproduced from Bench Aids for the Diagnosis of Malaria Infections, 2nd ed, with the permission of the
World Health Organization.)
A B C
D E
FIGURE 224-5 Thin blood films of Plasmodium vivax. A. Young trophozoite. B. Old trophozoite. C. Mature schizont. D. Female gametocyte. E. Male gametocyte. (Reproduced
from Bench Aids for the Diagnosis of Malaria Infections, 2nd ed, with the permission of the World Health Organization.)
(Figs. 224-4 through 224-9). In general, if the blood smear is negative
when examined by an experienced microscopist, the patient does not
have malaria. If reliable microscopy is not available, a rapid test should
be performed. Malaria is not a clinical diagnosis.
■ DEMONSTRATION OF THE PARASITE
The definitive diagnosis of malaria rests on the demonstration of
asexual forms of the parasite in stained peripheral-blood smears.
Of the Romanowsky stains, Giemsa at pH 7.2 is preferred; Field’s,
Wright’s, or Leishman’s stain can also be used. Staining of parasites
with the fluorescent dye acridine orange allows more rapid diagnosis of
malaria (but not speciation of the infection) in patients with low-level
parasitemia.
Both thin (Figs. 224-4 and 224-5) and thick (Figs. 224-6, 224-7,
224-8, and 224-9) blood smears should be examined. The thin
blood smear should be air-dried, fixed in anhydrous methanol, then
1728 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
A B
FIGURE 224-6 Thick blood films of Plasmodium falciparum. A. Trophozoites.
B. Gametocytes. (Reproduced from Bench Aids for the Diagnosis of Malaria
Infections, 2nd ed, with the permission of the World Health Organization.)
A B C
FIGURE 224-7 Thick blood films of Plasmodium vivax. A. Trophozoites. B. Schizonts. C. Gametocytes. (Reproduced from Bench Aids for the Diagnosis of Malaria Infections,
2nd ed, with the permission of the World Health Organization.)
stained; the RBCs in the tail of the film should then be examined
under oil immersion (×1000 magnification). The density of parasitemia is expressed as the number of parasitized erythrocytes per
1000 RBCs. The thick blood film should be of uneven thickness. The
smear should be dried thoroughly and stained without fixing. As many
layers of erythrocytes overlie one another and are lysed during the
staining procedure, the thick film has the advantage of concentrating
the parasites (by 40- to 100-fold compared with a thin blood film)
and thus increasing diagnostic sensitivity. Both parasites and white
blood cells (WBCs) are counted, and the number of parasites per unit
volume is calculated from the total leukocyte count. Alternatively, a
WBC count of 8000/μL is assumed. This figure is converted to the
number of parasitized erythrocytes per microliter. A minimum of 200
WBCs should be counted under oil immersion. Interpretation of blood
smears, particularly thick films, requires some experience because
artifacts are common. Before a thick smear is judged to be negative,
100–200 fields should be examined. In high-transmission areas, the
presence of up to 10,000 parasites/μL of blood may be tolerated without symptoms or signs in partially immune individuals. Thus, in these
areas, the detection of low-density malaria parasitemia is sensitive but
has low specificity in identifying malaria as the cause of illness. Because
the prevalence of asymptomatic parasitemia is often high, low-density
parasitemia is a common incidental finding in other conditions causing
fever.
Rapid, simple, sensitive, and specific antibody-based diagnostic
stick or card tests that detect P. falciparum–specific, histidine-rich
protein 2 (PfHRP2), lactate dehydrogenase, or aldolase antigens in
finger-prick blood samples are now being used widely in control
programs (Table 224-5). Some of these rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs)
carry a second antibody (either pan-malaria or P. vivax–specific) and
so distinguish falciparum malaria from the less dangerous malarias.
PfHRP2-based RDTs may remain positive for several weeks after
acute infection. This prolonged positivity is a disadvantage in hightransmission areas where infections are frequent but helps in the diagnosis of severe malaria in patients who have taken antimalarial drugs
and cleared peripheral parasitemia but who still have a strongly positive PfHRP2 test. A disadvantage of RDTs is that they do not quantify
parasitemia. Widespread use of PfHRP2 RDTs has put strong selection
pressure on P. falciparum populations in some areas, leading to an
increased prevalence of mutant parasites that are not detected by the
current generation of PfHRP2-based tests.
The relationship between parasite density and prognosis is complex and variable; in general, patients with >105
parasites/μL are at
increased risk of dying, but nonimmune patients may die with much
lower counts, and partially immune persons may tolerate parasitemia
levels many times higher with only minor symptoms. In severe malaria,
a poor prognosis is indicated by a predominance of more mature P.
falciparum parasites (i.e., >20% of parasites with visible pigment) in
the peripheral-blood film or by the presence of phagocytosed malarial
pigment in >5% of neutrophils (an indicator of recent schizogony). In
P. falciparum infections, gametocytemia peaks 1 week after the peak of
asexual parasite densities. Because the mature gametocytes of P. falciparum (unlike those of other plasmodia) are not affected by most antimalarial drugs, their persistence does not mean there is drug resistance
or a need to re-treat if a full course of appropriate treatment has been
given. Phagocytosed malarial pigment seen inside peripheral-blood
monocytes may provide a clue to recent infection if malaria parasites
are not detectable. After parasite clearance, this intraphagocytic malarial pigment is often evident for several days in peripheral-blood films
or for longer in bone marrow aspirates or smears of fluid expressed
after intradermal puncture.
Molecular diagnosis by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of parasite nucleic acid is more sensitive than microscopy or rapid
diagnostic tests for detecting malaria parasites and defining malarial
species. While currently impractical in the standard clinical setting,
PCR is used in reference centers in endemic areas. In epidemiologic
surveys, ultrasensitive PCR detection has proved very useful in identifying asymptomatic infections as control and eradication programs
drive parasite prevalences down to very low levels. Serologic diagnosis
with either indirect fluorescent antibody or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays is useful for screening of prospective blood donors
and may prove useful as a measure of transmission intensity in future
epidemiologic studies. Serology has no place in the diagnosis of acute
illness.
■ LABORATORY FINDINGS IN ACUTE MALARIA
Normochromic, normocytic anemia is usual. The leukocyte count is
generally normal, although it may be raised in very severe infections.
There is slight monocytosis, lymphopenia, and eosinopenia, with reactive lymphocytosis and eosinophilia in the weeks after acute infection.
The platelet count is usually reduced to ~105
/μL. The erythrocyte
sedimentation rate, plasma viscosity, and levels of C-reactive protein
and other acute-phase proteins are elevated. Severe infections may be
accompanied by prolonged prothrombin and partial thromboplastin
times and by more severe thrombocytopenia. Antithrombin III levels
are reduced even in mild infection. In uncomplicated malaria, plasma
concentrations of electrolytes, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), and creatinine are usually normal. Findings in severe malaria may include
metabolic acidosis, with low plasma concentrations of glucose, sodium,
bicarbonate, phosphate, and albumin, together with elevations in lactate, BUN, creatinine, urate, muscle and liver enzymes, and conjugated
and unconjugated bilirubin. Hypergammaglobulinemia is usual in
1729CHAPTER 224 Malaria
TABLE 224-5 Standard Methods for the Diagnosis of Malariaa
METHOD PROCEDURE ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
Thick blood filmb Blood should be uneven in thickness but thin enough
that the hands of a watch can be read through part of
the spot. Stain dried, unfixed blood spot with Giemsa,
Field’s, or another Romanowsky stain. Count number of
asexual parasites per 200 WBCs (or per 500 WBC at low
densities). Count and report gametocytes separately.c
Sensitive (0.001% parasitemia); species
specific; inexpensive
Requires experience (artifacts may be
misinterpreted as low-level parasitemia);
underestimates true count
Thin blood filmd Stain fixed smear with Giemsa, Field’s, or another
Romanowsky stain. Count number of RBCs containing
asexual parasites per 1000 RBCs. In severe malaria,
assess stage of parasite development and count
neutrophils containing malaria pigment.e
Count and
report gametocytes separately.c
Rapid; species specific; inexpensive;
in severe malaria, provides prognostic
informatione
Insensitive (<0.05% parasitemia); uneven
distribution of P. vivax, as enlarged
infected red cells concentrate at leading
edge
PfHRP2 dipstick or
card test
A drop of blood is placed on the stick or card, which
is then immersed in washing solutions. Monoclonal
antibody capture of parasitic antigens reads out as a
colored band.
Robust and relatively inexpensive;
rapid; sensitivity similar to or slightly
lower than that of thick films (~0.001%
parasitemia)
Detects only Plasmodium falciparum;
remains positive for weeks after highdensity infectionsf
; does not quantitate
P. falciparum parasitemia; evasion of
detection by certain strains due to
polymorphisms in HRP2 gene
Plasmodium LDH
dipstick or card test
A drop of blood is placed on the stick or card, which
is then immersed in washing solutions. Monoclonal
antibody capture of parasitic antigens reads out as two
colored bands. One band is genus specific (all malarias),
or P. vivax specific, and the other band is specific for
P. falciparum.
Rapid; sensitivity similar to or slightly
lower than that of thick films for
P. falciparum (~0.001% parasitemia)
May miss low-level parasitemia with
P. vivax, P. ovale, and P. malariae and
may not speciate these organisms; does
not quantitate P. falciparum parasitemia;
lower sensitivity for detection of
P. knowlesi, which may be misidentified as
P. falciparum
Microtube
concentration
methods with
acridine orange
staining
Blood is collected in a specialized tube containing
acridine orange, anticoagulant, and a float. After
centrifugation, which concentrates the parasitized cells
around the float, fluorescence microscopy is performed.
Sensitivity similar or superior to that
of thick films (~0.001% parasitemia);
ideal for processing large numbers of
samples rapidly
Does not speciate or quantitate; requires
fluorescence microscopy
a
Malaria cannot be diagnosed clinically with accuracy, but treatment should be started on clinical grounds if laboratory confirmation is likely to be delayed. In areas of
the world where malaria is endemic and transmission rates are high, low-level asymptomatic parasitemia is common in otherwise healthy people. Thus, malaria may not
be the cause of a fever, although in this context, the presence of >10,000 parasites/μL (~0.2% parasitemia) does indicate that malaria is likely to be the cause. Antibody
and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests have no role in the diagnosis of malaria except that PCR is increasingly used for genotyping and speciation in mixed infections
and for detection of low-level parasitemia in asymptomatic residents of endemic areas. b
Asexual parasites/200 WBCs × 40 = parasite count/μL (assumes a WBC count
of 8000/μL). See Figs. 224-6 through 224-9. c
P. falciparum gametocytemia may persist for days or weeks after clearance of asexual parasites. Gametocytemia without
asexual parasitemia does not indicate active infection. d
Parasitized RBCs (/1000) × hematocrit × 125.6 = parasite count/μL. See Figs. 224-4 and 224-5. e
The presence of
>100,000 parasites/μL (~2% parasitemia) is associated with an increased risk of severe malaria, but some patients have severe malaria with lower counts. At any level
of parasitemia, the finding that >50% of parasites are tiny rings (cytoplasm thickness less than half of nucleus width) carries a relatively good prognosis. In a severely ill
patient, the presence of visible pigment in >20% of parasites or of phagocytosed pigment in >5% of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (indicating massive recent schizogony)
carries a worse prognosis. f
Persistence of PfHRP2 is a disadvantage in high-transmission settings, where many asymptomatic people have positive tests, but can be used to
diagnostic advantage in low-transmission settings when a sick patient has previously received unknown treatment (which, in endemic areas, often consists of antimalarial
drugs). In this situation, a positive PfHRP2 test indicates that the illness is falciparum malaria, even if the blood smear is negative.
Abbreviations: LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; PfHRP2, P. falciparum histidine-rich protein 2; RBCs, red blood cells; WBCs, white blood cells.
A B C
FIGURE 224-8 Thick blood films of Plasmodium ovale. A. Trophozoites. B. Schizonts. C. Gametocytes. (Reproduced from Bench Aids for the Diagnosis of Malaria Infections,
2nd ed, with the permission of the World Health Organization.)
A B C
FIGURE 224-9 Thick blood films of Plasmodium malariae. A. Trophozoites. B. Schizonts. C. Gametocytes. (Reproduced from Bench Aids for the Diagnosis of Malaria
Infections, 2nd ed, with the permission of the World Health Organization.)
1730 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
immune and semi-immune subjects living in malaria-endemic areas.
Urinalysis generally gives normal results. In adults and children with
cerebral malaria, the mean cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) opening pressure
at lumbar puncture is ~160 mm H2
O; usually the CSF content is normal or there is a slight elevation of total protein level (<1.0 g/L [<100
mg/dL]) and cell count (<20/μL).
TREATMENT
Malaria
Patients with severe malaria and those unable to take oral drugs
should receive parenteral antimalarial therapy immediately
(Table 224-6). Antimalarial drug susceptibility testing can be performed but is rarely available, has poor predictive value in an individual case, and yields results too slowly to influence the choice of
treatment. If there is any doubt about the resistance status of the
infecting organism, it should be considered resistant.
The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) as first-line treatment for
uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria in malaria-endemic areas.
ACT is also the recommended first-line treatment for P. knowlesi
infections, and either chloroquine or an ACT is recommended for
the other malarias. The choice of ACT partner drug depends on the
likely sensitivity of the infecting parasites. Artemisinin-based combinations are sometimes unavailable in temperate countries, where
treatment recommendations are limited to the registered available
drugs. Despite increasing evidence of chloroquine resistance in
P. vivax (from parts of Indonesia, Oceania, eastern and southern
Asia, and Central and South America), chloroquine remains an
effective treatment for P. vivax malaria in many areas and for
P. ovale and P. malariae infections everywhere.
Artemisinin resistance in P. falciparum has emerged in Southeast
Asia over the past decade and has been followed by piperaquine and
mefloquine resistance. ACTs are failing in Cambodia, Vietnam, and
the border regions of Thailand. Significant artemisinin resistance is
TABLE 224-6 Regimens for the Treatment of Malariaa
TYPE OF DISEASE OR TREATMENT REGIMEN(S)
Uncomplicated Malaria
Known chloroquine-sensitive strains of
Plasmodium vivax, P. malariae, P. ovale,
P. falciparumb
Chloroquine (10 mg of base/kg stat followed by 5 mg/kg at 12, 24, and 36 h or by 10 mg/kg at 24 h and 5 mg/kg at 48 h)
or
Amodiaquine (10–12 mg of base/kg qd for 3 days)
Radical treatment for P. vivax or P.
ovale infection (prevention of relapse)
In addition to chloroquine or amodiaquine or ACT, primaquine (0.5 mg of base/kg qd in Southeast Asia and Oceania [total
dose 7 mg/kg] and 0.25 mg/kg elsewhere [total dose 3.5 mg/kg]) should be given for 14 days to prevent relapse.c
In mild G6PD
deficiency, 0.75 mg of base/kg should be given once weekly for 8 weeks. Primaquine should not be given in severe G6PD
deficiency.
P. falciparum malariac Artesunated,e (4 mg/kg qd for 3 days) plus sulfadoxine (25 mg/kg)/pyrimethamine (1.25 mg/kg) as a single dose
or
Artesunated
(4 mg/kg qd for 3 days) plus amodiaquine (10 mg of base/kg qd for 3 days)d,e
or
Artemether-lumefantrined
(1.5/9 mg/kg bid for 3 days with food)
or
Artesunated
(4 mg/kg qd for 3 days) plus mefloquine (24–25 mg of base/kg—either 8 mg/kg qd for 3 days or 15 mg/kg on day 2
and then 10 mg/kg on day 3)f
or
DHA-piperaquined
(target dose: 4/24 mg/kg qd for 3 days in children weighing <25 kg and 4/18 mg/kg qd for 3 days in persons
weighing ≥25 kg)
or
Artesunate-pyronaridined
(4/12 mg/kg qd for 3 days)
Second-line treatment/treatment of
imported malaria
Artesunatee
(2 mg/kg qd for 7 days) or quinine (10 mg of salt/kg tid for 7 days) plus 1 of the following 3:
1. Tetracyclinef
(4 mg/kg qid for 7 days)
2. Doxycyclinef
(3 mg/kg qd for 7 days)
3. Clindamycin (10 mg/kg bid for 7 days)
or
Atovaquone-proguanil (20/8 mg/kg qd for 3 days with food)
Severe Falciparum Malariag,h
Artesunatee
(2.4 mg/kg stat IV followed by 2.4 mg/kg at 12 and 24 h and then daily if necessary; for children weighing <20 kg,
give 3 mg/kg per dose)
or, if unavailable,
Artemethere
(3.2 mg/kg stat IM followed by 1.6 mg/kg qd)
or, if unavailable,
Quinine dihydrochloride (20 mg of salt/kgi
infused over 4 h, followed by 10 mg of salt/kg infused over 2–8 h q8hj
)
a
In endemic areas where malaria transmission is low, except in pregnant women and infants, a single dose of primaquine (0.25 mg of base/kg) should be added as a
gametocytocide to all falciparum malaria treatments to prevent transmission. This addition is considered safe, even in G6PD deficiency. b
Very few areas now have
chloroquine-sensitive P. falciparum malaria. c
Recent large studies indicate that these total doses can be condensed into 7-day primaquine regimens. d
In areas where
the partner drug to artesunate is known to be effective. Fixed-dose co-formulated combinations are available. The World Health Organization recommends artemisinin
combination regimens as first-line therapy for falciparum malaria in all tropical countries and advocates use of fixed-dose combinations. e
Artemisinin derivatives are
not readily available in some temperate countries. f
Tetracycline and doxycycline should not be given to pregnant women or to children <8 years of age. g
Oral treatment
should be substituted as soon as the patient recovers sufficiently to take fluids by mouth. h
Artesunate is the drug of choice when available. The data from large studies in
Southeast Asia showed a 35% lower mortality rate than with quinine, and very large studies in Africa showed a 22.5% reduction in mortality rate compared with quinine. The
doses of artesunate in children weighing <20 kg should be 3 mg/kg. i
A loading dose should not be given if therapeutic doses of quinine have definitely been administered in
the previous 24 h. j
Infusions can be given in 0.9% saline and 5–10% dextrose in water. Infusion rates for quinine should be carefully controlled.
Abbreviations: ACT, artemisinin combination therapy; DHA, dihydroartemisinin; G6PD, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase.
1731CHAPTER 224 Malaria
now prevalent throughout the Greater Mekong subregion and there
is recent clear evidence for the emergence of artemisinin resistance
in East Africa (Rwanda, Uganda). Falsified or substandard antimalarial drugs are sold in many Asian and African countries and may
be the cause of treatment failures. Characteristics of antimalarial
drugs are shown in Table 224-7.
SEVERE MALARIA
In large randomized controlled clinical trials, parenteral artesunate,
a water-soluble artemisinin derivative, has reduced severe falciparum malaria mortality rates by 35% in Asian adults and children
and by 22.5% in African children compared with quinine treatment.
Artesunate therefore is now the drug of choice for all patients with
severe malaria everywhere. Artesunate is given by IV injection but
is also absorbed rapidly following IM injection. Artemether and the
closely related drug artemotil (arteether) are oil-based formulations
given by IM injection; they are erratically absorbed and do not confer the same survival benefit as artesunate. A rectal formulation of
artesunate has been developed as a community-based pre-referral
treatment for patients in the rural tropics who cannot take oral
medications. Pre-referral administration of rectal artesunate has
been shown to decrease mortality rates among severely ill children
without access to immediate parenteral treatment. IV artesunate
has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for
emergency use in severe malaria and can be obtained through the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Drug Service
(see end of chapter for contact information). The antiarrhythmic
quinidine gluconate was used to treat severe malaria in the United
States previously, but manufacturing was discontinued in 2019;
artesunate is much more effective and safer. Although parenteral quinine is steadily being replaced by parenteral artesunate in
endemic areas, it still has a role in the very few cases of artemisinin-resistant severe falciparum malaria from Southeast Asia, where
both artesunate and quinine are given together in full doses.
Severe falciparum malaria constitutes a medical emergency
requiring intensive nursing care and careful management. Frequent
evaluation of the patient’s condition is essential. Adjunctive treatments such as high-dose glucocorticoids, urea, heparin, dextran,
desferrioxamine, antibody to tumor necrosis factor α, high-dose
phenobarbital (20 mg/kg), mannitol, or large-volume fluid or albumin boluses have proved either ineffective or harmful in clinical
trials and should not be used. In acute renal failure or severe metabolic acidosis, hemofiltration or hemodialysis should be started as
early as possible.
In severe malaria, parenteral antimalarial treatment should be
started immediately. Artesunate, given by either IV or IM injection,
is simple to administer, very safe, and rapidly effective. It does not
require dose adjustments in liver dysfunction or renal failure. It
should be used in pregnant women with severe malaria. If artesunate is unavailable and artemether or quinine is used, an initial
loading dose must be given so that therapeutic concentrations are
reached as soon as possible. Quinine causes dangerous hypotension
if injected rapidly and so must be administered carefully by ratecontrolled infusion only. If this approach is not possible, quinine
may be given by deep IM injections into the anterior thigh. The
optimal therapeutic range for quinine in severe malaria is not
known with certainty, but total plasma concentrations of 8–15 mg/L
for quinine are effective and do not cause serious toxicity. The systemic clearance and apparent volume of distribution of quinine are
markedly reduced and plasma protein binding is increased in severe
malaria, so that the blood concentrations attained with a given dose
are higher. If the patient remains seriously ill or in acute renal failure for >2 days, maintenance doses of quinine should be reduced by
30–50% to prevent toxic accumulation of the drug. The initial dose
should never be reduced. Convulsions should be treated promptly
with IV (or rectal) benzodiazepines. The role of prophylactic anticonvulsants in children is uncertain. If respiratory support is not
available, a full loading dose of phenobarbital (20 mg/kg) to prevent
convulsions should not be given as it may cause respiratory arrest.
When the patient is unconscious, the blood glucose level should
be measured every 4–6 h. All patients should receive a continuous infusion of dextrose, and blood concentrations ideally should
be maintained above 4 mmol/L. Hypoglycemia (<2.2 mmol/L or
40 mg/dL) should be treated immediately with bolus glucose. The
parasite count and hematocrit should be measured every 6–12 h.
Anemia develops rapidly. There is uncertainty as to the thresholds
for transfusion as there is some evidence that moderate anemia
may be beneficial in a patient with severe malaria and vital organ
dysfunction. It has been recommended that if the hematocrit falls
to <20%, whole blood (preferably fresh) or packed cells should be
transfused slowly, with careful attention to circulatory status. In
areas with higher malaria transmission, where blood for transfusion
is in short supply, a threshold of 15% is widely used. Renal function
should be checked at least daily. Children presenting with very
severe anemia (hemoglobin <4 g/dL) and acidotic breathing require
immediate blood transfusion. Accurate assessment is vital. Management of fluid balance is difficult in severe malaria, particularly
in adults, because of the thin dividing line between overhydration
(leading to pulmonary edema) and underhydration (contributing
to renal impairment). Fluid balance management is different from
that in sepsis: fluid boluses are potentially dangerous in severe
malaria. Nasogastric feeding should be delayed in nonintubated
patients (for 60 h in adults and 36 h in children) to reduce the risk
of aspiration pneumonia. As soon as the patient can take fluids,
oral therapy should be substituted for parenteral treatment and a
full 3-day course of ACT given. Mefloquine should be avoided as
follow-on treatment for severe malaria because of the increased risk
of post-malaria neurologic syndrome.
In areas of high transmission of both P. falciparum and P. vivax
(the island of New Guinea), severe and potentially life-threatening
anemia is common among children, and both species contribute.
Elsewhere, severe vivax malaria may occur but is uncommon.
Many patients have had comorbidities contributing to vital-organ
dysfunction.
P. knowlesi can cause severe disease associated with high parasite
densities. Acute kidney injury, respiratory distress, and shock have
all been described, but cerebral malaria does not occur. Treatment
for severe vivax and knowlesi malaria should follow the recommendations given for falciparum malaria.
UNCOMPLICATED MALARIA
P. falciparum and P. knowlesi infections should be treated with an
artemisinin-based combination because of their propensity for high
parasite densities and severe disease. Infections with sensitive strains
of P. vivax, P. malariae, and P. ovale should be treated either with an
ACT or oral chloroquine (total dose, 25 mg of base/kg). The ACT
regimens now recommended are safe and effective in adults, children,
and pregnant women. The rapidly eliminated artemisinin component
is usually an artemisinin derivative (artesunate, artemether, or dihydroartemisinin) given for 3 days, and the partner drug is usually a more
slowly eliminated antimalarial to which P. falciparum in the area is
sensitive. Six ACT regimens are currently recommended by the WHO:
artemether-lumefantrine, artesunate-mefloquine, dihydroartemisininpiperaquine, artesunate-sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, artesunateamodiaquine, and artesunate-pyronaridine. In areas of low malaria
transmission, a single dose of primaquine (0.25 mg/kg) should
be added to ACT as a P. falciparum gametocytocide to reduce the
transmissibility of the infection. This low dose of primaquine is
safe even in G6PD deficiency. Pregnant women should not be given
primaquine. Atovaquone-proguanil is highly effective everywhere,
although it is seldom used in endemic areas because of its high cost
and the propensity for rapid emergence of resistance. Recovery is
slower after atovaquone-proguanil treatment than after ACT. Of
great concern is the spread of artemisinin-resistant P. falciparum in
the Greater Mekong subregion of Southeast Asia. Infections with
these resistant parasites are cleared slowly from the blood, with parasite clearance half-lives over 5 hours and clearance times typically
exceeding 3 days. Cure rates with ACT have fallen to unacceptably
1732 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
TABLE 224-7 Properties of Antimalarial Drugs
DRUG(S)a PHARMACOKINETIC PROPERTIES ANTIMALARIAL ACTIVITY MINOR TOXICITY MAJOR TOXICITY
Quinine Good oral and IM absorption (quinine);
Cl and Vd
reduced, but plasma
protein binding (principally to α1
acid glycoprotein) increased (90%) in
malaria; quinine t
1/2: 16 h in malaria, 11 h
in healthy persons
Acts mainly on trophozoite blood
stage; kills gametocytes of P. vivax,
P. ovale, and P. malariae (but not
P. falciparum); no action on liver
stages
Common: cinchonism (tinnitus,
high-tone hearing loss, nausea,
vomiting, dysphoria, postural
hypotension); ECG QT interval
prolongation (usually by
<10%). Rare: diarrhea, visual
disturbance, rashes. Note: very
bitter taste
Common: hypoglycemia.
Rare: hypotension, blindness,
deafness, cardiac arrhythmias,
thrombocytopenia, hemolysis,
hemolytic-uremic syndrome,
vasculitis, cholestatic hepatitis,
neuromuscular paralysis.
Chloroquine Good oral absorption, very rapid
IM and SC absorption; complex
pharmacokinetics; enormous Cl and
Vd
(unaffected by malaria); blood
concentration profile determined by
distribution processes in malaria;
t
1/2: 1–2 months. Active desethyl
metabolite about 25% of parent drug
concentrations
As for quinine, but acts slightly
earlier in asexual cycle
Common: nausea, dysphoria,
pruritus in dark-skinned
patients, postural hypotension,
ECG QT prolongation. Rare:
accommodation difficulties,
keratopathy, hypoglycemia,
rash. Note: bitter taste but
usually well tolerated
Acute: hypotensive shock
(parenteral), cardiac arrhythmias,
neuropsychiatric reactions.
Chronic: retinopathy (cumulative
dose, >100 g), skeletal and
cardiac myopathy
Piperaquine Adequate oral absorption, may
be enhanced by fats; similar
pharmacokinetics to chloroquine; t
1/2:
21–28 days
As for chloroquine; retains activity
against multidrug-resistant
P. falciparum, but resistance has
emerged in Southeast Asia
Occasional epigastric pain,
diarrhea, ECG QT prolongation
None identified
Amodiaquine Good oral absorption; largely
converted to active metabolite
desethylamodiaquine; t
1/2: 4–5 days
As for chloroquine, but more active
against chloroquine-resistant
P. falciparum
Nausea (tastes better than
chloroquine), dysphoria,
headache, bradycardia, ECG QT
prolongation
Agranulocytosis; hepatitis, mainly
with prophylactic use; should not
be used with efavirenz
Primaquine Complete oral absorption; active
metabolite produced mainly via
CYP2D6; t
1/2: 5–7 h
Radical cure; eradicates hepatic
forms of P. vivax and P. ovale;
kills P. falciparum gametocytes
development; kills developing liver
stages of all species
Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea,
abdominal pain, hemolysis,
methemoglobinemia
Serious hemolytic anemia
in severe G6PD deficiency;
hemoglobinuria
Mefloquine Adequate oral absorption; no
parenteral preparation; t
1/2: 14–20 days
(shorter in malaria)
As for quinine Nausea, giddiness, dysphoria,
fuzzy thinking, sleeplessness,
nightmares, sense of
dissociation
Neuropsychiatric reactions,
convulsions, encephalopathy
Lumefantrine Highly variable absorption related to fat
intake; t
1/2: 3–4 days
As for quinine None identified None identified
Artemisinin
and derivatives
(artemether,
artesunate)
Good oral absorption; good
absorption of IM artesunate but
slow and variable absorption of IM
artemether; artesunate and artemether
biotransformed to active metabolite
dihydroartemisinin; all drugs eliminated
very rapidly; t
1/2: <1 h
Broader stage specificity and more
rapid than other drugs; no action on
liver stages; kills all but fully mature
gametocytes of P. falciparum
Reduction in reticulocyte count
(but not anemia); neutropenia
at high doses; in some cases,
delayed anemia after treatment
of severe malaria with
hyperparasitemia
Anaphylaxis, urticaria, fever
Pyrimethamine Good oral absorption, variable IM
absorption; t
1/2: 4 days
For blood stages, acts mainly on
mature forms; causal prophylactic
Well tolerated Megaloblastic anemia,
pancytopenia, pulmonary
infiltration
Proguanilb
(chloroguanide)
Good oral absorption; biotransformed
to active metabolite cycloguanil; t
1/2:
16 h; biotransformation reduced by oral
contraceptive use and in pregnancy
Causal prophylactic; not used alone
for treatment
Well tolerated; mouth ulcers
and rare alopecia
Megaloblastic anemia in renal
failure
Atovaquoneb Highly variable absorption related to fat
intake; t
1/2: 30–70 h
Acts mainly on trophozoite blood
stage
None identified None identified
Tetracycline,
doxycyclinec
Excellent absorption; t
1/2: 8 h for
tetracycline, 18 h for doxycycline
Weak antimalarial activity; should
not be used alone for treatment
Gastrointestinal intolerance,
deposition in growing bones
and teeth (tetracycline),
photosensitivity, moniliasis,
benign intracranial
hypertension
Renal failure in patients
with impaired renal function
(tetracycline)
Pyronaridine Rapid variable absorption, large Vd
; t
1/2:
12–14 days
Acts mainly on trophozoite blood
stage; kills gametocytes of P. vivax,
P. ovale, and P. malariae (but not
P. falciparum); no action on liver
stages
Gastrointestinal intolerance,
anemia, transient elevation
of aminotransferases,
hypoglycemia, headache
None identified
Arterolane t
1/2: 3 h Broad stage specificity; no action
on liver stages; kills all but fully
mature gametocytes of
P. falciparum
Gastrointestinal intolerance,
transient elevation of
aminotransferases
None identified
a
Several antimalarial drugs are formulated as different salts (e.g., phosphate, sulfate, hydrochloride) and are therefore prescribed as base equivalents. For example,
chloroquine phosphate 250 salt contains 155 mg base equivalent. It is very important to check when prescribing that the correct dose is being given. b
Atovaquone and
proguanil are prescribed as a fixed-dose combination. This and proguanil alone should not be given if the estimated glomerular filtration rate is <30 mL/min. c
Tetracycline
and doxycycline should not be given to pregnant women or to children <8 years of age.
Abbreviations: Cl, systemic clearance; ECG, electrocardiogram; G6PD, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase; Vd
, total apparent volume of distribution.
1733CHAPTER 224 Malaria
low levels in some areas. Triple antimalarial combinations are under
evaluation with promising results to date.
The 3-day ACT regimens are all well tolerated, although mefloquine is associated with increased rates of vomiting and dizziness.
As second-line treatments for recrudescence following first-line
therapy, a different ACT regimen may be given; another alternative
is a 7-day course of either artesunate or quinine plus tetracycline,
doxycycline, or clindamycin. Tetracycline and doxycycline are not
recommended to treat pregnant women or children <8 years of age,
however evidence for doxycycline toxicity in these groups is weak.
Oral quinine is extremely bitter and regularly produces cinchonism
comprising tinnitus, high-tone deafness, nausea, vomiting, and
dysphoria. Clinical responses are slower than those following ACT.
Adherence is poor with the required 7-day regimens of quinine.
Patients should be monitored for vomiting for 1 h after the
administration of any oral antimalarial drug. If there is vomiting,
the dose should be repeated. Symptom-based treatment, with acetaminophen (paracetamol) administration, lowers fever and thereby
reduces the patient’s propensity to vomit these drugs. Minor central
nervous system reactions (nausea, dizziness, sleep disturbances)
are common. The incidence of serious adverse neuropsychiatric
reactions to mefloquine treatment is ~1 in 1000 in Asia but may be
as high as 1 in 200 among Africans and white ethnic groups. All the
antimalarial quinolines (chloroquine, amodiaquine, mefloquine,
and quinine) exacerbate the orthostatic hypotension associated
with malaria, and all are tolerated better by children than by adults.
Pregnant women, young children, patients unable to tolerate oral
therapy, and nonimmune individuals (e.g., travelers) with suspected malaria should be evaluated carefully and hospitalization
considered. If there is any doubt as to the identity of the infecting
malarial species, treatment for falciparum malaria should be given.
A negative blood smear read by an experienced microscopist makes
malaria very unlikely but does not rule it out completely; thick
blood films should be checked again 1 and 2 days later to exclude
the diagnosis. Nonimmune patients receiving treatment for malaria
should have daily parasite counts performed until the thick films
are negative for asexual parasite stages. If the level of parasitemia
does not fall below 25% of the admission value in 72 h or if parasitemia has not cleared by 7 days (and adherence is assured), drug
resistance is likely and the regimen should be changed.
To eradicate persistent liver stages and prevent relapse (radical
treatment), primaquine (0.5 mg of base/kg in East Asia and Oceania
and 0.25 mg/kg elsewhere) should be given once daily for 14 days
to patients with P. vivax or P. ovale infection after laboratory tests
for G6PD deficiency have proved negative. The same total dose
may be given over 7 days. If the patient has a mild variant of G6PD
deficiency, primaquine can be given in a dose of 0.75 mg of base/kg
(maximum, 45 mg) once weekly for 8 weeks. Pregnant women with
vivax or ovale malaria should not be given primaquine but should
receive suppressive prophylaxis with chloroquine (5 mg of base/kg
per week) until delivery, after which radical treatment can be given.
The slowly eliminated 8-aminoquinoline tafenoquine has been registered in some countries. This allows radical cure to be given in a
single dose. The consequent risk of protracted hemolysis in G6PD
deficiency, including in female heterozygotes who may test as normal with current G6PD screens (which detect <30–40% of normal
enzyme activity), requires that all patients should have a quantitative test of G6PD activity before receiving tafenoquine. Only those
with >70% of normal activity should receive the drug. Radical
curative efficacy is lower than with primaquine in Southeast Asia.
MANAGEMENT OF COMPLICATIONS
Acute Renal Failure If plasma levels of BUN or creatinine
rise despite adequate rehydration, fluid administration should
be restricted to prevent volume overload. As in other forms of
hypercatabolic acute renal failure, renal replacement therapy is best
performed early (Chap. 310). Hemofiltration and hemodialysis are
more effective than peritoneal dialysis and are associated with lower
mortality risk. Some patients with renal impairment pass small
volumes of urine sufficient to allow control of fluid balance; these
cases can be managed conservatively if other indications for dialysis
do not arise. Renal function usually improves within days, but full
recovery may take weeks.
Acute Pulmonary Edema (Acute Respiratory Distress
Syndrome) This syndrome is caused by increased pulmonary
capillary permeability. Patients should be positioned with the head
of the bed at a 45° elevation and should be given oxygen and IV
diuretics. Positive-pressure ventilation should be started early if the
immediate measures fail (Chap. 305). Rarely, patients may require
extracorporeal membrane oxygenation.
Hypoglycemia An initial slow injection of 20% dextrose (2 mL/kg
over 10 min) should be followed by an infusion of 10% dextrose
(0.10 g/kg per hour). The blood glucose level should be checked
regularly thereafter as recurrent hypoglycemia is common, particularly among patients receiving quinine. In severely ill patients,
hypoglycemia commonly occurs together with metabolic (lactic)
acidosis and carries a poor prognosis.
Sepsis Hypoglycemia or gram-negative septicemia should be
suspected when the condition of any patient suddenly deteriorates
for no obvious reason during antimalarial treatment. In malariaendemic areas where a high proportion of children are parasitemic,
it is usually impossible to distinguish severe malaria from bacterial sepsis with confidence. These children should be treated with
both antimalarials and broad-spectrum antibiotics with activity
against nontyphoidal Salmonella species from the outset. Empirical
antibiotics should also be given to adults with >20% parasitemia.
Antibiotics should be considered for severely ill patients of any age
who are not responding to antimalarial treatment or deteriorate
unexpectedly.
Other Complications Patients who develop spontaneous bleeding
should be given fresh blood and IV vitamin K. Convulsions should
be treated with IV or rectal benzodiazepines and, if necessary, respiratory support. Aspiration pneumonia should be suspected in any
unconscious patient with convulsions, particularly with persistent
hyperventilation; IV antimicrobial agents and oxygen should be
administered, and pulmonary toilet should be undertaken.
GLOBAL CONSIDERATIONS
The goal of global eradication of malaria remains a challenge. Success
will require strong leadership, increased national commitment, and
substantial international support. The two main tools used to control
malaria are insecticide-treated bed nets (ITNs), previously shown to
reduce all-cause mortality in African children by 20%, and the ACTs.
New drugs are in development. One vaccine (the RTS,S/AS01 vaccine) which, in African children, provided 35–40% protection against
falciparum malaria over 4 years of follow-up, has recently been recommended by WHO for widespread roll-out. Challenges to malaria
eradication include the widespread distribution of Anopheles breeding
sites, the enormous number of infected persons, the emergence and
spread of resistance in P. falciparum to ACTs, increasing insecticide
resistance and behavioral changes (to avoid ITN contact) in anopheline
mosquito vectors, and inadequacies in human and material resources,
infrastructure, and control programs. Newer ITNs combine pyrethroids with piperonyl butoxide, which increases mosquito susceptibility to pyrethroids by inhibiting CYP P450. Eliminating vivax malaria is
further hindered by the lack of a simple, safe, radical curative regimen.
MALARIA PREVENTION
Malaria may be contained by judicious use of insecticides to kill
the mosquito vector, rapid diagnosis, patient management, and—
where effective and feasible—administration of intermittent preventive
treatments, seasonal malaria chemoprevention, or chemoprophylaxis to high-risk groups such as pregnant women and young children. Focal elimination of P. falciparum can be accelerated safely
by mass treatment with slowly eliminated antimalarials such as
1734 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine. Despite the enormous investment
in efforts to develop a malaria vaccine, no safe, highly effective, longlasting vaccine is likely to be available for general use in the near future.
The licensed recombinant protein sporozoite-targeted adjuvanted vaccine RTS,S/AS01 was only moderately efficacious in protecting African
children from malaria in field trials, and protection wanes rapidly. The
vaccine is being deployed in Ghana, Kenya, and Malawi as part of a
large-scale pilot project and has just been approved by WHO for general deployment. An irradiated live sporozoite vaccine is in late-stage
development, and research is ongoing to develop a vaccine to protect
against placental malaria (targeting VAR2CSA). While there is great
promise for one or several malaria vaccines on the more distant horizon, prevention and control measures will continue to rely on antivector and drug-use strategies for the foreseeable future.
■ PERSONAL PROTECTION AGAINST MALARIA
Simple measures to reduce the frequency of bites by infected mosquitoes in malarious areas are very important. These measures include the
avoidance of exposure to mosquitoes at their peak feeding times (usually dusk to dawn) and the use of insect repellents containing 10–35%
DEET (or, if DEET is unacceptable, 7% picaridin), suitable clothing,
and ITNs or other insecticide-impregnated materials. Widespread use
of bed nets treated with residual pyrethroids reduces the incidence of
malaria in areas where vectors bite indoors at night.
■ CHEMOPROPHYLAXIS
(Table 224-8; https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook/2020/travelrelated-infectious-diseases/malaria) Recommendations for malaria prophylaxis depend on knowledge of local patterns of drug sensitivity in
TABLE 224-8 Drugs Used in the Prophylaxis of Malariaa
DRUG USAGE ADULT DOSE PEDIATRIC DOSE COMMENTS
Atovaquoneproguanil
(Malarone)
Prophylaxis in areas with
chloroquine- or mefloquineresistant Plasmodium
falciparum
1 adult tablet POb 5–8 kg: ½ pediatric tabletc
daily
≥8–10 kg: ¾ pediatric tablet daily
≥10–20 kg: 1 pediatric tablet daily
≥20–30 kg: 2 pediatric tablets daily
≥30–40 kg: 3 pediatric tablets daily
≥40 kg: 1 adult tablet daily
Begin 1–2 days before travel to malarious areas.
Take daily at the same time each day while in the
malarious areas and for 7 days after leaving such
areas. Atovaquone-proguanil is contraindicated in
persons with severe renal impairment (creatinine
clearance rate, <30 mL/min). In the absence of
data, it is not recommended for children weighing
<5 kg, pregnant women, or women breast-feeding
infants weighing <5 kg. Atovaquone-proguanil
should be taken with food or a milky drink.
Chloroquine
phosphate (Aralen
and generic)
Prophylaxis only in the very
few areas with chloroquinesensitive P. falciparumc
or areas
with P. vivax only
300 mg of base
(500 mg of salt) PO
once weekly
5 mg of base/kg (8.3 mg of salt/kg)
PO once weekly, up to maximum
adult dose of 300 mg of base
Begin 1–2 weeks before travel to malarious areas.
Take weekly on the same day of the week while
in the malarious areas and for 4 weeks after
leaving such areas. Chloroquine may exacerbate
psoriasis.
Doxycycline (many
brand names and
generic)
Prophylaxis in areas with
chloroquine- or mefloquineresistant P. falciparumd
100 mg PO qd
(except in pregnant
women; see
Comments)
≥8 years of age: 2 mg/kg PO qd, up to
adult dose
Begin 1–2 days before travel to malarious areas.
Take daily at the same time each day while in the
malarious areas and for 4 weeks after leaving
such areas. Doxycycline is contraindicated in
children aged <8 years and in pregnant women.
Hydroxychloroquine
sulfate (Plaquenil)
An alternative to chloroquine
for primary prophylaxis
only in the very few areas
with chloroquine-sensitive
P. falciparumd
or areas with
P. vivax only
310 mg of base
(400 mg of salt) PO
once weekly
5 mg of base/kg (6.5 mg of salt/kg)
PO once weekly, up to maximum
adult dose of 310 mg of base
Begin 1–2 weeks before travel to malarious areas.
Take weekly on the same day of the week while in
the malarious areas and for 4 weeks after leaving
such areas. Hydroxychloroquine may exacerbate
psoriasis.
Mefloquine (Lariam
and generic)
Prophylaxis in areas with
chloroquine-resistant
P. falciparumd
228 mg of base
(250 mg of salt) PO
once weekly
≤9 kg: 4.6 mg of base/kg (5 mg of
salt/kg) PO once weekly
10–19 kg: ¼ tablete
once weekly
20–30 kg: ½ tablet once weekly
31–45 kg: ¾ tablet once weekly
≥46 kg: 1 tablet once weekly
Begin 1–2 weeks before travel to malarious
areas. Take weekly on the same day of the
week while in the malarious areas and for 4
weeks after leaving such areas. Mefloquine is
contraindicated in persons allergic to this drug or
related compounds (e.g., quinine and quinidine)
and in persons with active or recent depression,
generalized anxiety disorder, psychosis,
schizophrenia, other major psychiatric disorders,
or seizures. Use with caution in persons
with psychiatric disturbances or a history of
depression. Mefloquine is not recommended for
persons with cardiac conduction abnormalities.
Primaquine For prevention of malaria in
areas with mainly P. vivax
30 mg of base
(52.6 mg of salt)
PO qd
0.5 mg of base/kg (0.8 mg of salt/kg)
PO qd, up to adult dose; should be
taken with food
Begin 1–2 days before travel to malarious areas.
Take daily at the same time each day while in the
malarious areas and for 7 days after leaving such
areas. Primaquine is contraindicated in persons
with G6PD deficiency. It is also contraindicated
during pregnancy.
Primaquine Used for presumptive
antirelapse therapy (terminal
prophylaxis) to decrease risk of
relapses of P. vivax and P. ovale
30 mg of base
(52.6 mg of salt) PO
qd for 14 days after
departure from the
malarious area
0.5 mg of base/kg (0.8 mg of salt/kg),
up to adult dose, PO qd for 14 days
after departure from the malarious
area
This therapy is indicated for persons who have
had prolonged exposure to P. vivax and/or
P. ovale. It is contraindicated in persons with
G6PD deficiency as well as during pregnancy.
a
Several antimalarial drugs are formulated as different salts (e.g., phosphate, sulfate, hydrochloride) and are therefore prescribed as base equivalents. For example,
chloroquine phosphate 250 salt contains 155 mg base equivalent. It is very important to check when prescribing that the correct dose is being given. b
An adult tablet
contains 250 mg of atovaquone and 100 mg of proguanil hydrochloride. c
A pediatric tablet contains 62.5 mg of atovaquone and 25 mg of proguanil hydrochloride. d
Very few
areas now have chloroquine-sensitive falciparum malaria. e
One tablet contains 228 mg of base (250 mg of salt).
Abbreviation: G6PD, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase.
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/travelers/index.html.
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