Malaria and pregnancy

Reducing the prevalence of malaria may improve birth outcomes.

Image credit: Annie Spratt (CC0)

Malaria infects around 230 million people each year, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa, and causes more than 400,000 deaths. Pregnant women are particularly susceptible to malaria. The parasite that causes malaria can sap the mother’s iron stores and may starve the baby of nutrients. Babies born to infected mothers often have low birth weights, which can have lasting effects on their health and brain development.

Previous studies suggest that preventing malaria in pregnant women using insecticide-treated bed nets or medications may improve birth outcomes. Successful efforts to prevent malaria have led to substantially fewer infections in sub-Saharan Africa. But success has been uneven with some communities continuing to have high rates of infection. These differences may allow scientists to better understand the community-level impact of falling rates of malaria on pregnancy outcomes in the real world.

Heng et al. estimated that reducing malaria transmission minimises the number of infants born with low birth weights in communities in sub-Saharan Africa. In an observational study, they used data on more than 18,000 births in 19 countries in this region between 2000 and 2015 to assess the effects of declining malaria rates on birth weights. They found that a decrease of malaria prevalence is estimated to reduce the rate of low birth weight by 1.48%, which is a 17% reduction in the number of observed newborns with low birth weight in the study population. First-born infants appeared to benefit the most.

This highlights that malaria interventions are beneficial for pregnant women and their newborns. Most analyses of the impact and cost-benefit of malaria control have ignored the potential advantages of malaria control on birth weight, and may thus undermine the benefits of malaria control. The approach used by Heng et al. may further be useful for other epidemiologists studying global health.