4.4 Article

Systematic analysis of direct antiglobulin test results in post-artesunate delayed haemolysis

Journal

MALARIA JOURNAL
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12936-021-03735-w

Keywords

Malaria; Artemisinins; Artesunate; Hemolytic anemia; Coombs test; Drug-related side effects and adverse reactions

Funding

  1. Ricerca Corrente on emerging and re-emerging infections - Italian Ministry of Health
  2. Ricerca finalizzata - Italian Ministry of Health [WFR PE-2013-02357936]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In this study, nearly half of PADH patients had a positive DAT. The presence of a positive DAT may not necessarily indicate a pathogenic role of anti-erythrocyte antibodies in PADH patients, but rather a marker of immune activation.
Background Post-artesunate delayed haemolysis (PADH) is common after severe malaria episodes. PADH is related to the pitting phenomenon and the synchronous delayed clearance of once-infected erythrocytes, initially spared during treatment. However, direct antiglobulin test (DAT) positivity has been reported in several PADH cases, suggesting a contribution of immune-mediated erythrocyte clearance. The aim of the present study was to compare clinical features of cases presenting a positive or negative DAT. Methods Articles reporting clinical data of patients diagnosed with PADH, for whom DAT had been performed, were collected from PubMed database. Data retrieved from single patients were extracted and univariate analysis was performed in order to identify features potentially related to DAT results and steroids use. Results Twenty-two studies reporting 39 PADH cases were included: median baseline parasitaemia was 20.8% (IQR: 11.2-30) and DAT was positive in 17 cases (45.5%). Compared to DAT-negative individuals, DAT-positive patients were older (49.5 vs 31; p = 0.01), had a higher baseline parasitaemia (27% vs 17%; p = 0.03) and were more commonly treated with systemic steroids (11 vs 3 patients, p = 0.002). Depth and kinetics of delayed anaemia were not associated with DAT positivity. Conclusions In this case series, almost half of the patients affected by PADH had a positive DAT. An obvious difference between the clinical courses of patients presenting with a positive or negative DAT was lacking. This observation suggests that DAT result may not be indicative of a pathogenic role of anti-erythrocytes antibodies in patients affected by PADH, but it may be rather a marker of immune activation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available