TY - JOUR
T1 - Optimizing G6PD testing for
Plasmodium vivax case management and beyond
T2 - Why sex, counseling, and community engagement matter
AU - Chu, Cindy S.
AU - Bancone, Germana
AU - Kelley, Maureen
AU - Advani, Nicole
AU - Domingo, Gonzalo J.
AU - Cutiongo-de la Paz, Eva M.
AU - van der Merwe, Nicole
AU - Cohen, Jessica
AU - Gerth-Guyette, Emily
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Chu CS et al.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Safe access to the most effective treatment options for
Plasmodium vivax malaria are limited by the absence of accurate point-of-care testing to detect glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, the most common human genetic disorder. G6PD-deficient patients are at risk of life-threatening hemolysis when exposed to 8-aminoquinolines, the only class of drugs efficacious against
P. vivax hypnozoites. Until recently, only qualitative tests were available in most settings. These can identify patients with severe G6PD deficiency (mostly male) but not patients with intermediate G6PD deficiency (always female). This has led to and reinforced a gap in awareness in clinical practice of the risks and implications of G6PD deficiency in females-who, unlike males, can have a heterozygous genotype for G6PD. Increasing recognition of the need for radical cure of
P. vivax, first for patients' health and then for malaria elimination, is driving the development of new point-of-care tests for G6PD deficiency and their accessibility to populations in low-resource settings. The availability of user-friendly, affordable, and accurate quantitative point-of-care diagnostics for the precise classification of the three G6PD phenotypes can reduce sex-linked disparities by ensuring safe and effective malaria treatment, providing opportunities to develop supportive counseling to enhance understanding of genetic test results, and improving the detection of all G6PD deficiency phenotypes in newborns and their family members.
AB - Safe access to the most effective treatment options for
Plasmodium vivax malaria are limited by the absence of accurate point-of-care testing to detect glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, the most common human genetic disorder. G6PD-deficient patients are at risk of life-threatening hemolysis when exposed to 8-aminoquinolines, the only class of drugs efficacious against
P. vivax hypnozoites. Until recently, only qualitative tests were available in most settings. These can identify patients with severe G6PD deficiency (mostly male) but not patients with intermediate G6PD deficiency (always female). This has led to and reinforced a gap in awareness in clinical practice of the risks and implications of G6PD deficiency in females-who, unlike males, can have a heterozygous genotype for G6PD. Increasing recognition of the need for radical cure of
P. vivax, first for patients' health and then for malaria elimination, is driving the development of new point-of-care tests for G6PD deficiency and their accessibility to populations in low-resource settings. The availability of user-friendly, affordable, and accurate quantitative point-of-care diagnostics for the precise classification of the three G6PD phenotypes can reduce sex-linked disparities by ensuring safe and effective malaria treatment, providing opportunities to develop supportive counseling to enhance understanding of genetic test results, and improving the detection of all G6PD deficiency phenotypes in newborns and their family members.
KW - Disparity
KW - G6PD deficiency
KW - G6PD heterozygous females
KW - G6PD testing
KW - Gender
KW - Genetic counselling
KW - Haemolysis
KW - Neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia
KW - Plasmodium vivax
KW - Primaquine
KW - Sex
KW - Tafenoquine
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U2 - 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.15700.2
DO - 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.15700.2
M3 - Review article
C2 - 32766454
AN - SCOPUS:85089775776
SN - 2398-502X
VL - 5
SP - 21
JO - Wellcome Open Research
JF - Wellcome Open Research
M1 - 21
ER -