Malaria, malnutrition, and birthweight: A meta-analysis using individual participant data.
Cates JE, Unger HW, Briand V, Fievet N, Valea I, Tinto H, D'Alessandro U, Landis SH, Adu-Afarwuah S, Dewey KG, Ter Kuile FO, Desai M, Dellicour S, Ouma P, Gutman J, Oneko M, Slutsker L, Terlouw DJ, Kariuki S, Ayisi J, Madanitsa M, Mwapasa V, Ashorn P, Maleta K, Mueller I, Stanisic D, Schmiegelow C, Lusingu JPA, van Eijk AM, Bauserman M, Adair L, Cole SR, Westreich D, Meshnick S, Rogerson S.
Date:
2017-08
Abstract:
Background: Four studies previously indicated that the effect of malaria infection
during pregnancy on the risk of low birthweight (LBW; <2,500 g) may depend upon
maternal nutritional status. We investigated this dependence further using a large, diverse
study population.
Methods and findings: We evaluated the interaction between maternal malaria infection
and maternal anthropometric status on the risk of LBW using pooled data from 14,633
pregnancies from 13 studies (6 cohort studies and 7 randomized controlled trials)
conducted in Africa and the Western Pacific from 1996-2015. Studies were identified by
the Maternal Malaria and Malnutrition (M3) initiative using a convenience sampling
approach and were eligible for pooling given adequate ethical approval and availability
of essential variables. Study-specific adjusted effect estimates were calculated using
inverse probability of treatment-weighted linear and log-binomial regression models and
pooled using a random-effects model. The adjusted risk of delivering a baby with LBW
was 8.8% among women with malaria infection at antenatal enrollment compared to
7.7% among uninfected women (adjusted risk ratio [aRR] 1.14 [95% confidence interval
(CI): 0.91, 1.42]; N = 13,613), 10.5% among women with malaria infection at delivery
compared to 7.9% among uninfected women (aRR 1.32 [95% CI: 1.08, 1.62]; N =
11,826), and 15.3% among women with low mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC <23
cm) at enrollment compared to 9.5% among women with MUAC ≥ 23 cm (aRR 1.60
[95% CI: 1.36, 1.87]; N = 9,008). The risk of delivering a baby with LBW was 17.8%
among women with both malaria infection and low MUAC at enrollment compared to
8.4% among uninfected women with MUAC ≥ 23 cm (joint aRR 2.13 [95% CI: 1.21,
3.73]; N = 8,152). There was no evidence of synergism (i.e., excess risk due to
interaction) between malaria infection and MUAC on the multiplicative (p = 0.5) or
additive scale (p = 0.9). Results were similar using body mass index (BMI) as an
anthropometric indicator of nutritional status. Meta-regression results indicated that there
may be multiplicative interaction between malaria infection at enrollment and low
MUAC within studies conducted in Africa; however, this finding was not consistent on
the additive scale, when accounting for multiple comparisons, or when using other
definitions of malaria and malnutrition. The major limitations of the study included
availability of only 2 cross-sectional measurements of malaria and the limited
availability of ultrasound-based pregnancy dating to assess impacts on preterm birth and
fetal growth in all studies.
Conclusions: Pregnant women with malnutrition and malaria infection are at increased
risk of LBW compared to women with only 1 risk factor or none, but malaria and
malnutrition do not act synergistically.
Show full item record