Trends in reported malaria cases and the effects of malaria control in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Version
Published
Date Issued
2019
Author(s)
Matthys, Barbara
Lechthaler-Felber, Giulia
Likwela, Joris Losimba
Mavoko, Hypolite Muhindo
Rika, Junior Matangila
Mutombo, Meschac Mutombo
Ruckstuhl, Laura
Barczyk, Joanna
Shargie, Estifanos
Prytherch, Helen
Lengeler, Christian
Carvalho, Luzia Helena
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
Background
Considerable upscaling of malaria control efforts have taken place over the last 15 years in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the country with the second highest malaria case load after Nigeria. Malaria control interventions have been strengthened in line with the Millenium Development Goals. We analysed the effects of these interventions on malaria cases at health facility level, using a retrospective trend analysis of malaria cases between 2005 and 2014. Data were collected from outpatient and laboratory registers based on a sample of 175 health facilities that represents all eco-epidemiological malaria settings across the country.
Methods
We applied a time series analysis to assess trends of suspected and confirmed malaria cases, by health province and for different age groups. A linear panel regression model controlled for non-malaria outpatient cases, rain fall, nightlight intensity, health province and time fixed effects, was used to examine the relationship between the interventions and malaria case occurrences, as well as test positivity rates.
Results
Overall, recorded suspected and confirmed malaria cases in the DRC have increased. The sharp increase in confirmed cases from 2010 coincides with the introduction of the new treatment policy and the resulting scale-up of diagnostic testing. Controlling for confounding factors, the introduction of rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) was significantly associated with the number of tested and confirmed cases. The test positivity rate fluctuated around 40% without showing any trend.
Conclusion
The sharp increase in confirmed malaria cases from 2010 is unlikely to be due to a resurgence of malaria, but is clearly associated with improved diagnostic availability, mainly the introduction of RDTs. Before that, a great part of malaria cases were treated based on clinical suspicion. This finding points to a better detection of cases that potentially contributed to improved case management. Furthermore, the expansion of diagnostic testing along with the increase in confirmed cases implies that before 2010, cases were underreported, and that the accuracy of routine data to describe malaria incidence has improved.
Considerable upscaling of malaria control efforts have taken place over the last 15 years in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the country with the second highest malaria case load after Nigeria. Malaria control interventions have been strengthened in line with the Millenium Development Goals. We analysed the effects of these interventions on malaria cases at health facility level, using a retrospective trend analysis of malaria cases between 2005 and 2014. Data were collected from outpatient and laboratory registers based on a sample of 175 health facilities that represents all eco-epidemiological malaria settings across the country.
Methods
We applied a time series analysis to assess trends of suspected and confirmed malaria cases, by health province and for different age groups. A linear panel regression model controlled for non-malaria outpatient cases, rain fall, nightlight intensity, health province and time fixed effects, was used to examine the relationship between the interventions and malaria case occurrences, as well as test positivity rates.
Results
Overall, recorded suspected and confirmed malaria cases in the DRC have increased. The sharp increase in confirmed cases from 2010 coincides with the introduction of the new treatment policy and the resulting scale-up of diagnostic testing. Controlling for confounding factors, the introduction of rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) was significantly associated with the number of tested and confirmed cases. The test positivity rate fluctuated around 40% without showing any trend.
Conclusion
The sharp increase in confirmed malaria cases from 2010 is unlikely to be due to a resurgence of malaria, but is clearly associated with improved diagnostic availability, mainly the introduction of RDTs. Before that, a great part of malaria cases were treated based on clinical suspicion. This finding points to a better detection of cases that potentially contributed to improved case management. Furthermore, the expansion of diagnostic testing along with the increase in confirmed cases implies that before 2010, cases were underreported, and that the accuracy of routine data to describe malaria incidence has improved.
Subjects
R Medicine (General)
S Agriculture (General)
Publisher DOI
Journal
PLoS One
ISSN
1932-6203
Volume
14
Issue
7
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Submitter
Werndli, Nadine
Citation apa
Lechthaler, F., Matthys, B., Lechthaler-Felber, G., Likwela, J. L., Mavoko, H. M., Rika, J. M., Mutombo, M. M., Ruckstuhl, L., Barczyk, J., Shargie, E., Prytherch, H., Lengeler, C., & Carvalho, L. H. (2019). Trends in reported malaria cases and the effects of malaria control in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In PLoS One (Vol. 14, Issue 7). Public Library of Science (PLoS). https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.8382
File(s)![Thumbnail Image]()
Loading...
open access
Name
journal.pone.0219853.pdf
License
Attribution 4.0 International
Version
published
Size
1.31 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
a30f3309ff82b6531d23b9be3b9f002b
