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Should we care about Plasmodium vivax and HIV co-infection? A systematic review and a cases series from the Brazilian Amazon

期刊

MALARIA JOURNAL
卷 20, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12936-020-03518-9

关键词

Plasmodium vivax; HIV; Co-infection; Systematic review; Epidemiology

资金

  1. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do Amazonas (FAPEM): Universal Amazonas [002/2018]
  2. Pro-Estado Program [002/2008, 007/2018, 005/2019]
  3. POSGRAD 2020 Program [006/2020]

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This study conducted a systematic review of HIV/PvCo cases and found a scarcity of reports in the literature regarding the clinical and laboratory outcomes of HIV/Plasmodium vivax co-infection. The study revealed that the real prevalence of HIV/PvCo is still unknown, despite the high prevalence of malaria and HIV locally. Despite being relatively small, this study is the largest case series to describe HIV/PvCo.
BackgroundMalaria and HIV are two important public health issues. However, evidence on HIV-Plasmodium vivax co-infection (HIV/PvCo) is scarce, with most of the available information related to Plasmodium falciparum on the African continent. It is unclear whether HIV can change the clinical course of vivax malaria and increase the risk of complications. In this study, a systematic review of HIV/PvCo studies was performed, and recent cases from the Brazilian Amazon were included.MethodsMedical records from a tertiary care centre in the Western Brazilian Amazon (2009-2018) were reviewed to identify HIV/PvCo hospitalized patients. Demographic, clinical and laboratory characteristics and outcomes are reported. Also, a systematic review of published studies on HIV/PvCo was conducted. Metadata, number of HIV/PvCo cases, demographic, clinical, and outcome data were extracted.ResultsA total of 1,048 vivax malaria patients were hospitalized in the 10-year period; 21 (2.0%) were HIV/PvCo cases, of which 9 (42.9%) had AIDS-defining illnesses. This was the first malaria episode in 11 (52.4%) patients. Seven (33.3%) patients were unaware of their HIV status and were diagnosed on hospitalization. Severe malaria was diagnosed in 5 (23.8%) patients. One patient died. The systematic review search provided 17 articles (12 cross-sectional or longitudinal studies and 5 case report studies). A higher prevalence of studies involved cases in African and Asian countries (35.3 and 29.4%, respectively), and the prevalence of reported co-infections ranged from 0.1 to 60%.ConclusionReports of HIV/PvCo are scarce in the literature, with only a few studies describing clinical and laboratory outcomes. Systematic screening for both co-infections is not routinely performed, and therefore the real prevalence of HIV/PvCo is unknown. This study showed a low prevalence of HIV/PvCo despite the high prevalence of malaria and HIV locally. Even though relatively small, this is the largest case series to describe HIV/PvCo.

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