4.5 Article

Treatment for Severe Malaria: Post-Artesunate Delayed Haemolysis and Neutropenia

Journal

HEALTHCARE
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/healthcare10030413

Keywords

artesunate; post-artesunate delayed haemolysis; neutropenia

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This article discusses post-artesunate delayed haemolysis and neutropenia as potential adverse reactions after treatment with artesunate for severe malaria. Through literature review, these two side effects were also found to occur in children. While the benefits of artesunate outweigh its side effects, hematological follow-up is still necessary to avoid potential complications.
Parenteral artesunate (AS) is the WHO first-line treatment recommended in adults and children for severe malaria. Post-artesunate delayed haemolysis (PADH) is an uncommon adverse reaction to AS with a mechanism that is not fully understood, occurring in adults and children. Neutropenia is another possible finding after AS treatment, albeit rare. We present the case of a child who experienced both effects after treatment with AS for imported severe Falciparum malaria with very high parasitaemia. In addition, thirty-five paediatric cases of PADH, five cases of delayed anaemia without known haemolysis, and fourteen cases of neutropenia after artesunate treatment were identified from the literature review. PADH seems to be a dose-independent reaction and is not strongly related to hyperparasitaemia, although it is more frequent in this case. To date, the benefits of AS outweigh its potential side effects. However, haematological follow-up is mandatory to avoid possible complications from anaemia and neutropenia, especially in children treated with other contemporary drugs.

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