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The Safety of Artemisinin Derivatives for the Treatment of Malaria in the 2nd or 3rd Trimester of Pregnancy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Abstract

Given the high morbidity for mother and fetus associated with malaria in pregnancy, safe and efficacious drugs are needed for treatment. Artemisinin derivatives are the most effective antimalarials, but are associated with teratogenic and embryotoxic effects in animal models when used in early pregnancy. However, several organ systems are still under development later in pregnancy. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of the occurrence of adverse pregnancy outcomes among women treated with artemisinins monotherapy or as artemisinin-based combination therapy during the 2nd or 3rd trimesters relative to pregnant women who received non-artemisinin antimalarials or none at all. Pooled odds ratio (POR) were calculated using Mantel-Haenszel fixed effects model with a 0.5 continuity correction for zero events. Eligible studies were identified through Medline, Embase, and the Malaria in Pregnancy Consortium Library. Twenty studies (11 cohort studies and 9 randomized controlled trials) contributed to the analysis, with 3,707 women receiving an artemisinin, 1,951 a non-artemisinin antimalarial, and 13,714 no antimalarial. The PORs (95% confidence interval (CI)) for stillbirth, fetal loss, and congenital anomalies when comparing artemisinin versus quinine were 0.49 (95% CI 0.24–0.97, I2 = 0%, 3 studies); 0.58 (95% CI 0.31–1.16, I2 = 0%, 6 studies); and 1.00 (95% CI 0.27–3.75, I2 = 0%, 3 studies), respectively. The PORs comparing artemisinin users to pregnant women who received no antimalarial were 1.13 (95% CI 0.77–1.66, I2 = 86.7%, 3 studies); 1.10 (95% CI 0.79–1.54, I2 = 0%, 4 studies); and 0.79 (95% CI 0.37–1.67, I2 = 0%, 3 studies) for miscarriage, stillbirth and congenital anomalies respectively. Treatment with artemisinin in 2nd and 3rd trimester was not associated with increased risks of congenital malformations or miscarriage and may be was associated with a reduced risk of stillbirths compared to quinine. This study updates the reviews conducted by the WHO in 2002 and 2006 and supports the current WHO malaria treatment guidelines malaria in pregnancy.

Introduction

Given the high morbidity and mortality associated with malaria in pregnancy, safe and effective drugs are needed for treatment and prevention [1]. However, there is limited information on the safety profile of most antimalarials when used during pregnancy, in part because few clinical trials enroll pregnant women and there are few examples of systematic approaches to pregnancy pharmacovigilance [2,3].

The World Health Organization (WHO) currently recommends the use of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) for the treatment of uncomplicated malaria in adults, children and in pregnant women in the 2nd or 3rd trimester [4]. Seven days of quinine with clindamycin is recommended for uncomplicated malaria in the first trimester of pregnancy [5]. The reports from relatively small observational studies and randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have not identified an increased risk of miscarriage or stillbirth after receipt of artemisinins during pregnancy, compared to women receiving non-artemisinin antimalarials or to pregnant women who did not receive any antimalarials [612].

The WHO recommends the use of ACTs in the first trimester if this is the only treatment immediately available, or if treatment with 7-day quinine plus clindamycin fails or if there is uncertainty about adherence to a 7-day treatment [13]. Studies of rats, rabbits, and primates have reported the artemisinin class of antimalarial drugs to be embryotoxic and teratogenic [2]. These animal studies suggest that the etiologically relevant time period for exposure in humans is within the first trimester. Several organs are still under development in the 2nd trimester and therefore sensitive to teratogens, including the uterus (18 weeks), brain (until birth), eyes (24–36 weeks), and ears (18 weeks) [14], although animal data did not observe these types of anomalies after artemisinin exposure [15]. Nevertheless, animal data do not always mirror the effects observed in humans.

We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis examining the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes associated with 2nd or 3rd trimester use of an artemisinin, compared with the experience of pregnant women treated with other antimalarial therapies and pregnant women without malaria and therefore no exposure to an antimalarial.

Methods

This analysis was completed in accordance with the PRISMA guidelines (S1 and S2 Figs) [16]. The safety outcomes assessed were miscarriage (<28 weeks), stillbirth (>/ = 28 weeks), fetal loss (composite of miscarriage or stillbirth), and congenital anomalies.

Search Strategy

We conducted an electronic search of Medline, Embase, and the Malaria in Pregnancy Library as of January 12, 2015, and the Medline search was updated on June 15, 2015, using the Patient, Intervention, Comparator, Outcome, Timing and Setting (PICOTS) framework (S1 Fig) [17,18]. We also searched 'gray literature' databases, conference abstracts and manually reviewed reference lists of selected publications.

Inclusion/exclusion criteria

Studies fulfilling the following criteria were eligible for inclusion: prospective cohort studies or RCTs enrolling women of child bearing age (WOCBA) or pregnant women of any gestational age who received an artemisinin in the 2nd or 3rd trimester either as a monotherapy or as an ACT for the treatment of P. falciparum, P. vivax or mixed infections, and with information available on fetal loss and/or congenital anomalies, and information on timing of exposure in pregnancy (e.g. 2nd or 3rd trimester). Study exclusion criteria were case-control studies and cross-sectional surveys, studies not involving artemisinins treatment, studies reporting only 1st trimester artemisinin exposures, and studies that did not report pregnancy outcomes. In studies that reported exposures in both first trimester and 2nd or 3rd trimester, the pregnancies with first trimester exposures were excluded from the analysis.

Data Extraction

Two reviewers (SK and AE) independently screened titles and abstracts of all citations to identify potentially eligible studies (first screen). The second screen consisted of full-text review of studies selected by either reviewer in the first screen with agreement required for final study eligibility and inclusion in the systematic review. Any disagreements on study inclusion were resolved by discussions between the reviewers. The two reviewers independently extracted data using a standardized form and resolved any discrepancies by consensus. The primary data abstracted included number, type, and timing of antimalarial drug exposures; patient characteristics including age, parity, parasitemia level, and HIV prevalence; and pregnancy outcomes including the number of miscarriages, stillbirths, and congenital anomalies reported by exposure. In addition we created a composite outcome of “any fetal loss” which combined any miscarriage or stillbirth for studies that did not clearly delineate the number of exposures in the 2nd and 3rd trimester.

Bias assessment

To assess the possibility of bias we applied the Cochrane Collaboration’s tool to score RCT studies as having high, low, or unclear risk of bias [19]. The Newcastle Ottawa scale was used to evaluate cohort studies for selection bias, comparability, and assessment of the outcome [20].

Exposure groups

The main exposure group of interest consisted of pregnant women who received artemisinin treatment in the 2nd or 3rd trimester. The comparison groups consisted of the following other exposure groups 1) treatment with oral quinine in the 2nd or 3rd trimester, 2) treatment with SP (for case-management) in the 2nd or 3rd trimester, 3) treatment with ‘other antimalarials’ (any non-artemisinin) in the 2nd or 3rd trimester, 4) women who received IPT-SP for prevention of malaria, and 5) pregnancies which did not receive an antimalarial drug in the 2nd or 3rd trimester (i.e. because they did not have clinical malaria).

Outcome definitions

Miscarriage was defined as pregnancy loss of <28 weeks of gestation and stillbirth as pregnancy loss of ≥28 weeks. This cut-off was chosen because the majority of the studies were conducted in resource-limited settings without access to neonatal intensive care. Fetal loss was defined as miscarriage or stillbirth. Studies that reported miscarriages but did not report the number of exposures occurring before 28 weeks of gestation or studies that reported miscarriages and stillbirths using different definitions, were included in the analyses of any fetal loss.

We defined congenital malformation as any major or minor anomaly. We included all reported congenital anomalies in the analysis because of inconsistencies in the definition of major congenital malformations. We grouped congenital anomalies by organ system according to classifications developed by the Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry [21].

Statistical Methods

Comparing risk estimates between exposure groups: To compare the risk between exposure groups, crude pooled odds ratios (PORs) and pooled risk differences (PRDs) were obtained from the reported count data. Our primary measure of association was a POR, but for analyses in which studies reported zero outcomes in both comparison arms, we conducted PRD models to allow all data to contribute to the model. We used a 0.5 continuity correction with a Mantel-Haenszel fixed effects model to correct for zero event cells [22]. As sensitivity analysis, we used random effects model with DerSimonian-Laird weighting and Peto Method with a 0.5 continuity correction, and Mantel-Haenzel fixed effects with continuity corrections of 0.01 and 0.69 [22].

As per the Cochrane Collaboration guidelines, I2 values >75% were considered indicative of considerable heterogeneity [23]. We conducted stratified analyses by study type, geographic location, and comparison drug exposures, as well as bias level where possible (i.e. low, moderate, high; S1 and S2 Tables).

Results

A total of 944 articles or reports were identified. After removal of duplications and review of titles, a total of 309 abstracts were reviewed and 20 studies (11 cohort studies and 9 RCTs, 10 from Africa and 10 from Asia) met the inclusion criteria and were included in at least one of the analyses (Fig 1). Six studies did not include comparisons with other non-artemisinins and were used only descriptively and not included in the pooled ORs, with the remaining 14 studies providing data for the pooled ORs. Twelve studies did not report if exposures occurred in the second or third trimester, and therefore were excluded from the analysis of miscarriage. The search did not identify any studies of artemisinins used for intermittent preventive treatment (IPT) of malaria during pregnancy that provided necessary data on pregnancy outcomes.

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Fig 1. PRISMA flow diagram for search results June 15, 2015.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.g001

A total of 3,646 women in these 20 studies received an artemisinin during the 2nd or 3rd trimester of pregnancy (Tables 1 and 2). The most common exposures were: artemether-lumefantrine (AL) (N = 2,000), dihydroartemisinin piperaquine (DP) (N = 328), monotherapy with any artemisinin derivative including artemether and artesunate (N = 225), artesunate sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (AS-SP) (N = 197), artesunate-mefloquine (AS-MQ) (N = 94), artesunate-amodiaquine (AS-AQ) (N = 83), and artesunate atovaquone-proguanil AAP (N = 39). One study reported 412 women receiving artesunate or artemether alone or in combination with MQ, clindamycin, atovaquone-proquanil (AP), artesunate iv, or AL but specific numbers were not reported by drug due to multiple treatments per patient [12]. There were 1,951 women who received other antimalarials in the 2nd or 3rd trimester including: chlorproguanil-dapsone (CD) (N = 81); chloroquine-SP (N = 24); mefloquine monotherapy (N = 36); quinine (N = 661); SP (for case-management) (N = 456); SP-AQ (N = 80), and SP-azithromycin (AZM) (N = 47), and for prevention IPTp-SP (N = 566). In these 20 studies, an additional 13,714 pregnant women reported no exposure to antimalarials and no recorded illness of malaria. Two studies with a no antimalarial comparison group were conducted in regions in sub-Saharan Africa where the risk of malaria is high [7,24]. The majority (n = 8194) of the women who were not exposed to an antimalarial were from one site in Thailand with a low risk of malaria where all patients were screened weekly for malaria, and therefore no IPTp-SP was provided [12].

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Table 1. Description of cohort studies identified in the systematic review and included in the meta-analysis.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.t001

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Table 2. Description of RCT studies identified in the systematic review and included in the meta-analysis.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.t002

Ten studies reported data on presence of fever at enrollment, and 12 studies reported enrollment parasitemia (S3 Table). The mean gestational age at enrollment ranged from 21 weeks to 38 weeks across the studies. Only three studies reported data on HIV status, preventing stratification by HIV status [8,33,36]. Further details about the characteristics of included women can be found in S3 Table.

Miscarriage

Eight studies reported data on late miscarriages after receipt of an artemisinin in the second trimester, but only four studies reported comparisons with pregnant women who did not receive artemisinins and there were no studies with a quinine arm. A total of 34 miscarriages were reported among 939 women given artemisinins, including data from 5 studies reporting no miscarriages among 304 exposures.

Comparison to SP for treatment.

Only one study compared use of artemisinins to use of SP, with zero miscarriages among 169 ACTs exposures and 5 miscarriages among 205 SP exposures.

Comparison to no antimalarial drug exposure.

Three studies compared artemisinin users to women who did not receive an antimalarial drug. There were 34 miscarriages among 725 women who received an artemisinin, and 1009 miscarriages among 9264 women who received no antimalarials and therefore were unlikely to have malaria (POR = 1.13, 95% CI 0.77–1.66, I2 = 86.7%, 3 studies) (Fig 2).

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Fig 2. Pooled odds ratio for miscarriage after 2nd trimester exposures to artemisinins stratified by comparison group.

*McGready 2001 reported multiple types of artemisinin exposures that were combined for this analysis (12). ART artemisinins, AL artemether-lumefantrine, AS-SP artesunate sulfadoxine pyrimethamine, SP sulfadoxine pyrimethamine, No exp. No exposure to antimalarials.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.g002

Stillbirth

Sixteen studies reported a total of 83 stillbirths among 3,595 women who received an artemisinin in the 2nd or 3rd trimester.

Comparison to Quinine.

In studies with a quinine comparison arm, there were 14 stillbirths among 603 women who received an artemisinin and 20 stillbirths among 461 women who received quinine (POR 0.49, 95% CI 0.24–0.97, I2 = 0%, 3 studies) (Fig 3).

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Fig 3. Pooled odds ratio for stillbirth after 2-3rd trimester exposures to artemisinins compared to other drugs.

*McGready 2001 reported multiple types of artemisinin exposures that were combined for this analysis and reported as ACT (12). ^McGready 1999 MQ or Q exposures include patients given MQ, Q, or both (33). ART: artesunate, AL: artemether-lumefantrine, AAP: artesunate atovaquone proguanil, AS-AQ: artesunate-amodiaquine, Q: quinine, Q+C: quinine+clindamycin, SP: sulfadoxine pyrimethamine, AQ: amodiaquine, SP+CQ: sulfadoxine pyrimethamine chloroquine, MQ: mefloquine, SP-AZM: sulfadoxine pyrimethamine azithromycin, CD: chlorproguanal-dapsone, IPT: intermittent preventative treatment, RCT: randomized controlled trial, ACT: artemisinin combination therapy, No exp. no exposure to antimalarials.

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Comparison to SP treatment.

In the two studies comparing use of artemisinins to SP for case-management, there were 13 stillbirths among 511 women who received an artemisinin, and 14 stillbirths among 516 women who received SP (POR 0.93, 95% CI 0.43–2.01, I2 = 56%, 2 studies).

Comparison to other antimalarials for treatment.

Receipt of an artemisinin was not associated with a clear increase in the risk of stillbirth compared to receipt of SP combinations (POR 3.47, 95% CI 0.46–26.03 I2 = 100%, 2 studies); these results were based on only two studies with considerable evidence of heterogeneity. Receipt of artemisinin compared to mefloquine and/or quinine for the treatment of malaria was not associated with an increased risk of stillbirth OR 1.03 (95% CI 0.21–4.96).

Comparison to IPT-SP.

Only one study compared women who received artemisinins for treatment to women who only received IPT-SP. There was no increased risk of stillbirth after receipt of an artemisinin compared to women who received only IPT-SP, OR = 0.84 (95% CI 0.22–3.29).

Comparison to no antimalarial drug exposure.

In the studies that compared use of an artemisinin to no exposure to antimalarials, there were 60 stillbirths among 2131 women who received an artemisinin, and 277 among 12,622 women who received no antimalarials (POR 1.10, 95% CI 0.79–1.54, I2 = 0%, 4 studies).

Any Fetal Loss

In twelve studies that did not specify if exposures occurred in the 2nd or 3rd trimester, there were 38 fetal losses among 1505 women who received an artemisinin in the 2 or 3rd trimester.

Comparison to Quinine.

In the 6 studies with a quinine arm, there were 19 fetal loses among 731 women who received artemisinins, and there were 24 fetal losses among 559 quinine exposures (POR = 0.58, 95% CI 0.31–1.06, I2 = 0%, 6 studies) (Fig 4).

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Fig 4. Pooled Odds ratio for fetal loss after 2-3rd trimester exposures to artemisinins stratified by comparison group.

*McGready 2001 reported multiple types of artemisinin exposures that were combined for this analysis and reported as ACTs (12). ^McGready 1999 MQ or Q exposures include patients given MQ, Q, or both (33). ART: artesunate, AS-MQ: artesunate mefloquine, AL: artemether-lumefantrine, DP: dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine, AAP: artesunate atovaquone proguanil, AS-SP: artesunate sulfadoxine pyrimethamine, AS-AQ: artesunate-amodiaquine, Q: quinine, Q+C: quinine+clindamycin, SP: sulfadoxine pyrimethamine, AQ: amodiaquine, SP+CQ: sulfadoxine pyrimethamine chloroquine, MQ: mefloquine, SP-AZM: sulfadoxine pyrimethamine azithromycin, CD: chlorproguanal-dapsone, IPT: intermittent preventative treatment, RCT: randomized controlled trial, ACT: artemisinin combination therapy, No exp. No exposure to antimalarials.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.g004

Comparison to SP for treatment.

In the two studies with an SP arm, there were 9 fetal losses among 121 women who received an artemisinin and there were zero fetal losses among 66 women who received SP for treatment. (POR 5.86, 95% CI 0.73–46.88, I2 = 0%, 2 studies).

Comparison to other non-artemisinin antimalarials for treatment.

Receipt of artemisinins in the 2nd or 3rd trimester was not associated with an increased risk of fetal loss compared to SP combinations or other antimalarials (POR 1.71, 95% CI 0.57–5.07, I2 = 0%, 3 studies, and POR 1.70 95% CI 0.70–4.15, I2 = 0%, 2 studies, respectively).

Comparison to IPT-SP.

Only one study compared artemisinin to IPT-SP. There was no increased risk of fetal loss among women who received an artemisinin for treatment compared to women who only received IPT-SP (OR = 0.84, 95% CI 0.22–3.29).

Comparison to no antimalarial drug exposure.

Based on the results of a single study, there was no increased risk of fetal loss among women who received an artemisinin compared to women who received no antimalarial drugs (OR = 0.93, 95% CI 0.50–1.74).

Congenital Anomalies

Thirteen studies reported a total of 55 congenital anomalies among 2,807 exposures to artemisinins in the 2nd or 3rd trimesters.

Comparison to quinine.

There were 4 congenital anomalies among infants born to 242 women who received an artemisinin and 4 congenital anomalies among 239 women who received quinine (POR = 1.00, 95% CI 0.27–3.75, I2 = 0%, 3 studies) (Fig 5).

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Fig 5. Pooled odds ratio for congenital anomalies after 2-3rd trimester exposures to artemisinins stratified by comparison group.

*McGready 2001 reported multiple types of artemisinin exposures that were combined for this analysis and reported as ACTs (12). ART: artesunate, AL: artemether-lumefantrine, AAP: artesunate- atovaquone proguanil, AS-AQ: artesunate-amodiaquine, Q: quinine, Q+C: quinine+clindamycin, SP: sulfadoxine pyrimethamine, AQ: amodiaquine, SP+AQ: sulfadoxine pyrimethamine amodiaquine, MQ: mefloquine, CD: chlorproguanal-dapsone, RCT: randomized controlled trial, ACT: artemisinin combination therapy, No exp. No exposure to antimalarials.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.g005

Comparison to SP for treatment.

In the two studies comparing artemisinins to SP, there were 32 congenital anomalies among 532 women who received an artemisinin and 21 congenital anomalies among 472 women who received SP (POR = 1.37, 95% CI 0.78–2.39, I2 = 70.3%, 2 studies).

Comparison to no antimalarial drug exposure.

In studies with women who were not exposed to antimalarials in pregnancy, there were 12 congenital anomalies among 1745 women who received an artemisinin and 64 congenital anomalies among 4857 women who did not receive antimalarials in pregnancy (POR 0.79, 95% CI 0.37–1.67, I2 = 0%, 3 studies).

Across the 13 studies reporting data on congenital anomalies, the most common congenital anomaly reported was umbilical hernia; 21 among infants exposed in utero to ACT during the 2 or 3rd trimester and an additional 12 umbilical hernias reported among 1,113 infants whose mother used other antimalarials during pregnancy. There were three central nervous system (CNS) defects among infants exposed to ACTs (anencephaly, hydrocephaly, and hemimegaloencephaly), but no CNS defects were reported among infants exposed to other antimalarials. One heart defect was reported among artemisinin exposed infants (acyanotic heart disease), and none among infants exposed to other antimalarials or no antimalarials in the 2 or 3rd trimester of pregnancy (Table 3). Studies did not routinely report congenital anomalies stratified by major and minor anomalies; therefore, it was not possible to conduct an analyses of the risk of any major anomaly. Furthermore, small numbers of events precluded the analysis of congenital anomalies stratified by organ system.

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Table 3. Reported congenital anomalies grouped by organ system and stratified by antimalarial drug exposure during 2-3rd trimester of pregnancy.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.t003

Sensitivity Analyses

In order to assess the robustness of our findings for our POR models we conducted sensitivity analyses using different correction factors for zero cells (0.69 and 0.01), and two different pooling techniques, Peto method and random effects models, given that there is a lack of consensus in the literature on the most appropriate method for modeling rare outcomes [22]. Sensitivity analyses using different correction factors for zero cells (0.69 and 0.01), and two different pooling techniques, Peto method and random effects models, did not change the overall interpretation of the analyses, but the results were most sensitive to changes in the correction factor and not the modeling technique (S4 Table).

Discussion

There was no indication that the risk of late miscarriage was higher in artemisinin recipients compared to women who received no antimalarials in the 2nd trimester or to SP for treatment, although the latter comparison included only a single study. There were fewer studies that compared the risk of late miscarriage, but in 3 studies that compared the risk against women who received no antimalarials in the 2nd trimester, and in 1 study against women who received SP for treatment, there was no evidence for an increased risk. The risk of stillbirths in women treated with artemisinins in the 2nd or 3rd trimester was lower compared to those treated with oral quinine during the same gestational period. Additionally, there was no increased risk of stillbirth after receipt of an artemisinin compared to receiving other antimalarials for treatment, IPT-SP only, or receiving no antimalarials. No increased risk was observed for fetal loss or congenital abnormalities when compared to quinine, SP, other antimalarials, IPT-SP, or to women who did not receive any antimalarials.

This meta-analysis of over 3500 artemisinin exposures builds upon the existing literature by including monotherapy and multiple artemisinins combinations therapies and using multiple comparison groups. Previous WHO guidelines in 2002 and 2006 were developed based on the findings for 607 and 1000 2nd or 3rd trimester exposure respectively [38,39]. Specifically, the results support the findings of a previous meta-analyses of the safety of the artemether-lumefantrine (AL) used in pregnancy which showed that AL was not associated with an increased risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes compared to quinine and SP for treatment [40]. Additionally these results complement recent findings from an updated analysis of first trimester malaria on the Thailand/Burma border which found no difference in the risk of miscarriage between women treated with an artemisinin compared to women treated with quinine [41].

This study has several limitations. The findings from the 11 cohort studies may be confounded by indication due to the non-random administration of treatment. Of the nine studies that randomized patients to a treatment, five compared an artemisinin to quinine, so confounding is unlikely to be an important concern for this comparison. Confounding due to malaria infection is of particular concern in the studies comparing ACTs for treatment to no antimalarials, because these studies did not take into account the effect of malaria on poor pregnancy outcomes. Despite this limitation, we found equivalent risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes for women who received artemisinins compared to women who received other therapies and no antimalarials. Additionally because of small sample sizes, we were unable to stratify our analyses by potential effect modifiers such as geography (Asia vs. Africa), which may account for the observed heterogeneity of our results given the different epidemiology of malaria in the two regions. Furthermore, only 3 studies reported any data on HIV infection. Included studies had limited ability to detect an effect on miscarriages because of their recruitment strategies: recruiting women from ANCs can lead to underestimates of the occurrence of miscarriage because women often present late in the 2nd trimester, and women who have an early miscarriage will not present at all, limiting the interpretation of the findings. Additionally, there may be further misclassification of outcome due to limitations of the gestational age assessment. Finally, there may be heterogeneity in the rigor by which studies assessed outcomes such as congenital anomalies. Although each study contributing to the analysis was assessed for bias using either the Cochrane Collaboration Tool or the Newcastle Ottawa Scale, these tools may not fully capture all sources of bias in the assessment of safety outcomes.

This analysis was limited to artemisinin use for case-management only. Recently two prevention studies which randomized pregnant women to IPT with DP were published [42,43]. As more studies of ACT used for IPT with pregnancy outcomes become available, additional meta-analyses of safety outcomes may be warranted, especially if they enroll women from first-trimester.

Despite identifying over 3500 women who received artemisinins in the 2nd or 3rd trimester, the sample size was too limited to allow the evaluation of the risks of specific congenital anomalies. Also, in most studies the ascertainment of anomalies was based only on surface exams conducted at birth which would not detect congenital anomalies of internal organs or congenital anomalies of the brain leading to functional deficits. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, major congenital anomalies in the U.S. are detected in 5% of children by age 5, but only 60% of these anomalies are detected at birth [44]. The studies included in the analyses reported congenital anomalies (major and minor) among 1% of births or less. This low proportion is likely due to the fact that birth defects such as cardiac defects and those related to brain development would not be detected by surface exams, and therefore this study cannot rule out or estimate the risk of these specific anomalies. Given that the brain is still developing through the 2nd and 3rd trimester, it would be important to assess exposed infants later in infancy or childhood to rule out an increased risk of these types of defects. In the review, only three studies followed infants up to one year after birth [10,11,35].

The results of this study build upon the limited data to-date on the safety of ACT used in pregnancy. These data suggest that the risk of miscarriage and congenital anomalies is similar among women treated with artemisinins in 2nd or 3rd trimester of pregnancy and women treated with quinine or other non-artemisinin antimalarials. Furthermore, the risk of stillbirth was lower compared to quinine recipients, possibly reflecting a higher efficacy of artemisinins against infection [45]. Though these results were based on few exposures across a limited number of studies, they support the current WHO guidelines recommending the use of ACTs for treatment of malaria in the 2nd or 3rd trimester of pregnancy.

Supporting Information

S1 Fig. PICOTS Framework of the systematic search.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.s001

(TIFF)

S2 Fig. PubMed Search Strategy, Search Date June 15, 2015.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.s002

(TIFF)

S3 Fig. Pooled Risk Difference for fetal loss after 2-3rd trimester exposures to artemisinins, stratified by comparison group.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.s003

(TIFF)

S1 Table. Newcastle Ottawa Scale Assessing Bias in Cohort Studies.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.s007

(DOCX)

S2 Table. Cochrane Bias Assessment of Randomized Controlled Trials.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.s008

(DOCX)

S3 Table. Clinical presentation of pregnant women upon enrollment from included studies.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.s009

(DOCX)

S4 Table. Sensitivity analyses of pooled odds ratios using different modeling techniques and correction factors.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164963.s010

(DOCX)

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank Dr. Miriam Nakelembe for providing additional data, and Brianna Mills for her analytical and editorial support.

Author Contributions

  1. Conceptualization: SDK FOtK AS.
  2. Data curation: SDK AvE.
  3. Formal analysis: SDK.
  4. Funding acquisition: SDK FOtK AS.
  5. Investigation: SDK AvE.
  6. Methodology: SDK AvE FOtK AS NSW SE.
  7. Project administration: SDK.
  8. Supervision: FOtK AS.
  9. Visualization: SDK AvE.
  10. Writing – original draft: SDK.
  11. Writing – review & editing: SDK AvE FOtK AS NSW SE ES SD RS.

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