Pattern of drug utilization for treatment of uncomplicated malaria in urban Ghana following national treatment policy change to artemisinin-combination therapy
Pattern of drug utilization for treatment of uncomplicated malaria in urban Ghana following national treatment policy change to artemisinin-combination therapy
Background: Change of first-line treatment of uncomplicated malaria to artemisinin-combination therapy (ACT) is widespread in Africa. To expand knowledge of safety profiles of ACT, pharmacovigilance activities are included in the implementation process of therapy changes. Ghana implemented first-line therapy of artesunate-amodiaquine in 2005. Drug utilization data is an important component of determining drug safety, and this paper describes how anti-malarials were prescribed within a prospective pharmacovigilance study in Ghana following anti-malarial treatment policy change. Methods: Patients with diagnosis of uncomplicated malaria were recruited from pharmacies of health facilities throughout Accra in a cohort-event monitoring study. The main drug utilization outcomes were the relation of patient age, gender, type of facility attended, mode of diagnosis and concomitant treatments to the anti-malarial regimen prescribed. Logistic regression was used to predict prescription of nationally recommended first-line therapy and concomitant prescription of antibiotics. Results: The cohort comprised 2,831 patients. Curative regimens containing an artemisinin derivative were given to 90.8% (n= 2,574) of patients, although 33% (n = 936) of patients received an artemisinin-based monotherapy. Predictors of first-line therapy were laboratory-confirmed diagnosis, age >5 years, and attending a government facility. Analgesics and antibiotics were the most commonly prescribed concomitant medications, with a median of two co-prescriptions per patient (range 1–9). Patients above 12 years were significantly less likely to have antibiotics co-prescribed than patients under five years; those prescribed non-artemisinin monotherapies were more likely to receive antibiotics. A dihydroartemisinin-amodiaquine combination was the most used therapy for children under five years of age (29.0%, n = 177). Conclusion: This study shows that though first-line therapy recommendations may change, clinical practice may still be affected by factors other than the decision or ability to diagnose malaria. Age, diagnostic confirmation and suspected concurrent conditions lead to benefit:risk assessments for individual patients by clinicians as to which anti-malarial treatment to prescribe. This has implications for adherence to policy changes aiming to implement effective use of ACT. These results should inform education of health professionals and rational drug use policies to reduce poly-pharmacy, and also suggest a potential positive impact of increased access to testing for malaria both within health facilities and in homes.
1-8
Dodoo, A.
61a926a9-425d-44e0-94ed-7d07e629019f
Fogg, Carole
42057537-d443-462a-8944-c804252c973b
Asiimwe, Alex
b50efb1b-be49-4bdd-bd24-e8b98ca2d689
Nartey, E.
126f1343-25a7-47e3-b8fc-3f46d8ff8e5c
Kodua, A.
51730dac-6dcc-4569-bed3-40864282354f
Tenkorang, O.
825d2064-5d41-4caa-a897-14ee6d063a57
Ofori-Adjei, D.
5afab8a0-a1c8-46d5-bd21-cfd74f5c0b4d
5 January 2009
Dodoo, A.
61a926a9-425d-44e0-94ed-7d07e629019f
Fogg, Carole
42057537-d443-462a-8944-c804252c973b
Asiimwe, Alex
b50efb1b-be49-4bdd-bd24-e8b98ca2d689
Nartey, E.
126f1343-25a7-47e3-b8fc-3f46d8ff8e5c
Kodua, A.
51730dac-6dcc-4569-bed3-40864282354f
Tenkorang, O.
825d2064-5d41-4caa-a897-14ee6d063a57
Ofori-Adjei, D.
5afab8a0-a1c8-46d5-bd21-cfd74f5c0b4d
Dodoo, A., Fogg, Carole, Asiimwe, Alex, Nartey, E., Kodua, A., Tenkorang, O. and Ofori-Adjei, D.
(2009)
Pattern of drug utilization for treatment of uncomplicated malaria in urban Ghana following national treatment policy change to artemisinin-combination therapy.
Malaria Journal, 8 (2), .
(doi:10.1186/1475-2875-8-2).
Abstract
Background: Change of first-line treatment of uncomplicated malaria to artemisinin-combination therapy (ACT) is widespread in Africa. To expand knowledge of safety profiles of ACT, pharmacovigilance activities are included in the implementation process of therapy changes. Ghana implemented first-line therapy of artesunate-amodiaquine in 2005. Drug utilization data is an important component of determining drug safety, and this paper describes how anti-malarials were prescribed within a prospective pharmacovigilance study in Ghana following anti-malarial treatment policy change. Methods: Patients with diagnosis of uncomplicated malaria were recruited from pharmacies of health facilities throughout Accra in a cohort-event monitoring study. The main drug utilization outcomes were the relation of patient age, gender, type of facility attended, mode of diagnosis and concomitant treatments to the anti-malarial regimen prescribed. Logistic regression was used to predict prescription of nationally recommended first-line therapy and concomitant prescription of antibiotics. Results: The cohort comprised 2,831 patients. Curative regimens containing an artemisinin derivative were given to 90.8% (n= 2,574) of patients, although 33% (n = 936) of patients received an artemisinin-based monotherapy. Predictors of first-line therapy were laboratory-confirmed diagnosis, age >5 years, and attending a government facility. Analgesics and antibiotics were the most commonly prescribed concomitant medications, with a median of two co-prescriptions per patient (range 1–9). Patients above 12 years were significantly less likely to have antibiotics co-prescribed than patients under five years; those prescribed non-artemisinin monotherapies were more likely to receive antibiotics. A dihydroartemisinin-amodiaquine combination was the most used therapy for children under five years of age (29.0%, n = 177). Conclusion: This study shows that though first-line therapy recommendations may change, clinical practice may still be affected by factors other than the decision or ability to diagnose malaria. Age, diagnostic confirmation and suspected concurrent conditions lead to benefit:risk assessments for individual patients by clinicians as to which anti-malarial treatment to prescribe. This has implications for adherence to policy changes aiming to implement effective use of ACT. These results should inform education of health professionals and rational drug use policies to reduce poly-pharmacy, and also suggest a potential positive impact of increased access to testing for malaria both within health facilities and in homes.
Text
A_1475-2875-8-2
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 5 January 2009
Published date: 5 January 2009
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 437006
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/437006
ISSN: 1475-2875
PURE UUID: e3076913-19a3-40ef-9398-d118e16e93ce
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 15 Jan 2020 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:56
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
A. Dodoo
Author:
Alex Asiimwe
Author:
E. Nartey
Author:
A. Kodua
Author:
O. Tenkorang
Author:
D. Ofori-Adjei
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics