Effect of malaria rapid diagnostic tests on the management of uncomplicated malaria with artemether-lumefantrine in Kenya: a cluster randomized trial
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Publication Date
2009Author
Jacek Skarbinski, Peter O Ouma, Louise M Causer, Simon K Kariuki, John W Barnwell, Jane A Alaii, Alexandre Macedo de Oliveira, Dejan Zurovac, Bruce A Larson, Robert W Snow, Alexander K Rowe, Kayla F Laserson, Willis S Akhwale, Laurence Slutsker, Mary J Hamel
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Shortly after Kenya introduced artemether-lumefantrine (AL) for first-line treatment of uncomplicated
malaria, we conducted a pre-post cluster randomized controlled trial to assess the effect of providing malaria rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) on recommended treatment (patients with malaria prescribed AL) and overtreatment (patients
without malaria prescribed AL) in outpatients ≥ 5 years old. Sixty health facilities were randomized to receive either
RDTs plus training, guidelines, and supervision (TGS) or TGS alone. Of 1,540 patients included in the analysis, 7%
had uncomplicated malaria. The provision of RDTs coupled with TGS emphasizing AL use only after laboratory confirmation of malaria reduced recommended treatment by 63%-points ( P = 0.04), because diagnostic test use did not
change (−2%-points), but health workers significantly reduced presumptive treatment with AL for patients with a clinical diagnosis of malaria who did not undergo testing (−36%-points; P = 0.03). Health workers generally adhered to RDT
results when prescribing AL: 88% of RDT-positive and 9% of RDT-negative patients were treated with AL, respectively.
Overtreatment was low in both arms and was not significantly reduced by the provision of RDTs (−12%-points, P = 0.30).
RDTs could potentially improve malaria case management, but we urgently need to develop more effective strategies for
implementing guidelines before large scale implementation.
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