International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Dec 2023)

Favorable outcome without corticosteroids during post-artesunate delayed hemolysis with positive direct antiglobulin test in severe imported Plasmodium falciparum malaria, France

  • Olivier Paccoud,
  • Xavier Chamillard,
  • Eric Kendjo,
  • Isabelle Vinatier,
  • Laure Surgers,
  • Denis Magne,
  • Benjamin Wyplosz,
  • Adéla Angoulvant,
  • Olivier Bouchaud,
  • Arezki Izri,
  • Sophie Matheron,
  • Sandrine Houzé,
  • Marc Thellier,
  • Alioune P. Ndour,
  • Pierre Buffet,
  • Eric Caumes,
  • Stéphane Jauréguiberry

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 137
pp. 144 – 148

Abstract

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Objectives: Positive direct antiglobulin tests (DATs) have been reported in cases of post-artesunate delayed hemolysis (PADH), but the causal role of auto-immune hemolysis remains unclear. We aimed to analyze a cohort of patients with PADH and DAT during severe malaria.Methods: We describe PADH and DAT results in a 7-year multi-center retrospective cohort of patients receiving artesunate for severe imported malaria.Results: Of 337 patients treated with artesunate, 46 (13.6%) had at least one DAT result within 30 days of treatment initiation, and 25/46 (54.3%) had at least one positive DAT. Among 40 patients with available data, 17 (42.5%) experienced PADH. Patient characteristics were similar for patients with a positive or negative DAT, and DAT positivity was not associated with PADH occurrence (P = 0.36). Among patients, 5/13 (38.5%) with a positive DAT after day 7 experienced PADH, compared to 10/13 (76.9%) of those with a negative DAT after day 7 (P = 0.11). Overall, 41% of patients required blood transfusions, and outcome was favorable without corticosteroids, even in cases of PADH.Conclusions: DAT does not appear to be a marker of PADH, but rather an indirect marker of an immune-mediated mechanism. DAT positivity should not lead to the administration of systemic corticosteroids during PADH.

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