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Malaria treatment policies: the challenge, strategies and
the optionsSOTA, Nairobi, Kenya
12th June 2002
Global Malaria Control Strategy
• Early diagnosis and effective treatment of malaria illness
Some factors preventing effective case management
• Failure to recognize malaria
• Failure to recognize signs of severe malaria
• Use of inappropriate or inadequate courses of treatment
• Poor adherence to tx guidelines at health facility level
• Poor adherence at the household level
• Poor availability and access to drugs
• Use of poor quality drugs
• Use of ineffective drugs due to drug resistance
Challenges to antimalarial drug policy
• Widespread resistance to common antimalarials e.g. chloroquine
• Mounting resistance to replacement therapies e.g. sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP)
• New therapies are more expensive and have more complicated treatment regimens
• Availability of poor quality or substandard drugs
• Home treatment; private sector more difficult to control
Challenges to antimalarial drug policy [2]
Equitable access to reduce
mortality and morbidity
Emphasis on community management
Reduces development of resistance
Emphasis on regulation and controlled use
Access Rational Use
Changing national treatment policies
Need a rational approach for decision making for:• When to change national first line treatment
– AFRO guidelines:
› 15-25% drug resistance alert phase
› ≥ 25% drug resistance is action phase
• “Evidence” for changing policy~ Drug resistance and monitoring
~ Attitudes and practices
~ Behaviors
Efficacy vs. effectiveness
Program effectiveness:• Drug efficacy• Drug use determinants
~ Availability
~ Affordability
~ Acceptability
~ Compliance– Frequency and total number of doses
– Adverse effects and acceptability
– Ability of users and mothers to follow directions
Efficacy vs. effectivenesse.g. SP
• Parasite clearance=80%• Availability=90%• Affordability=100%• Compliance=100% (single dose/DOT)
Efficacy vs. effectivenesse.g. SP
80%
72% 72% 72%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
effe
ctiv
enes
s
Eff icacy Availability Affordability Compliance
drug use determinants
Efficacy vs. effectivenesse.g. Artesunate/SP
• Parasite clearance=99%• Availability=50%• Affordability=50%• Compliance=50%
Efficacy vs. effectivenesse.g. Artesunate/SP
99%
50%
24.75%
12.38%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
eff
ec
tiv
en
es
s
Efficacy Availability Affordability Compliance
drug use determinants
Changing national treatment protocols:Factors to consider
• Efficacy and safety
• Adverse effects
• Compliance (ease of use, acceptability, formulation)
• Cost
• Ability to curb resistance development
• Ability to reduce transmission (gametocytocidal)
• Useful therapeutic life
• Use in young children and pregnant women
Changing national treatment protocols:Other factors to consider
• Biological vs. clinical diagnosis• Quality• Rational use• Reduce availability/demand of undesired product• Role of regulation
~ Regulate undesirable drugs
~ Decrease availability
Changing national treatment protocolsOther factors to consider
• Financial burden for change~ Direct cost: more expensive drugs~ Indirect cost: retraining of HW, new STGs etc.
• Capacity of health system to implement policy• Provision for Intermittent Preventive Therapy (IPT)
for pregnant women• Home management• Engage the private sector (franchising, subsidies,
social marketing, incentives)
Options for replacement therapies
• Continue using SP until it is no longer effective (potential of compromising the use of other antifolates under development)
• Amodiaquine monotherapy (cross-resistance with CQ)
• Mefloquine, Malarone etc. but, not without problems
• Combination therapy but not without consideration to issues
Artemisinin based combination therapy
Advantages of ACT:• High efficacy and rapid clearance of parasites• Experience in SE Asia shown to slow down the
development of resistance• Artemisinin reduces gametocyte carriage thus
reduces malaria transmission
Issues concerning use of ACT
• Limited experience in Africa
• Lack of safety data in pregnant women
• Higher cost
• Need for better diagnosis
• Compliance, packaging
• Issues of misuse due to role in severe malaria
• All monotherapies must be replaced with CT
• Public vs Private sector
• Which combinations?
Cost comparison of adult tx courses of available new combinations in relation to selected monotherapies
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
Cost (US$)
CQ
SP
AQ
MQ
ART
Q
Coartem
ART/SP
ART/AQ
ART/MQ
Cost
• Incremental cost of AQ+AS rather than AQ+SP: US$1.10 per patient
• Tanzania: 16 million cases annually• Increased cost of US$17.6 million (annually)• Total annual government expenditure on health:
US$ 5.5 per capita (malaria: US$ 0.42 per capita)
Lessons learned
Need for documentation of lessons learned and a framework for a rational approach to drug policies and implementation
• Examples:~ Malawi: Difficulties in implementation
~ Kenya: SP deregulation
~ Zambia: Cost of combination therapy
~ Uganda: CQ + SP (pre-packaging etc.)
Malaria Action Coalition
• USAID mechanism for focusing funds towards an integrated work plan
• Goal: The attainment of the Abuja goals for the treatment of malaria and the control of malaria during pregnancy
• Partners: WHO/CDC/MNH/RPM Plus• Funds channeled to partners through field support and
“core” funds to provide support to address these programmatic challenges of antimalarial drug policy development and implementation