Emerging Infectious Diseases (May 2011)

Severe Imported Plasmodium falciparum Malaria, France, 1996–2003

  • Elise Seringe,
  • Marc Thellier,
  • Arnaud Fontanet,
  • Fabrice Legros,
  • Olivier Bouchaud,
  • Thierry Ancelle,
  • Eric Kendjo,
  • Sandrine Houze,
  • Jacques Le Bras,
  • Martin Danis,
  • Rémy Durand

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1705.101527
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 5
pp. 807 – 813

Abstract

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Little is known about severe imported Plasmodium falciparum malaria in industrialized countries where the disease is not endemic because most studies have been case reports or have included <200 patients. To identify factors independently associated with the severity of P. falciparum, we conducted a retrospective study using surveillance data obtained from 21,888 P. falciparum patients in France during 1996–2003; 832 were classified as having severe malaria. The global case-fatality rate was 0.4% and the rate of severe malaria was ≈3.8%. Factors independently associated with severe imported P. falciparum malaria were older age, European origin, travel to eastern Africa, absence of chemoprophylaxis, initial visit to a general practitioner, time to diagnosis of 4 to 12 days, and diagnosis during the fall–winter season. Pretravel advice should take into account these factors and promote the use of antimalarial chemoprophylaxis for every traveler, with a particular focus on nonimmune travelers and elderly persons.

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