P. Langerock
Medical Research Council
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Featured researches published by P. Langerock.
The Lancet | 1995
Umberto D'Alessandro; B.O. Olaleye; P. Langerock; Moses Aikins; Madeleine C. Thomson; Mk Cham; Brian Greenwood; W. McGuire; Steve Bennett; B.A. Cham
After the success of a controlled trial of insecticide-treated bednets in lowering child mortality, The Gambia initiated a National Insecticide Impregnated Bednet Programme (NIBP) in 1992 with the objective of introducing this form of malaria control into all large villages in The Gambia. Five areas (population 115,895) were chosen as sentinel sites for evaluation of the NIBP. During the first year of intervention a 25% reduction was achieved in all-cause mortality in children 1-9 years old living in treated villages (rate ratio 0.75 [95% CI 0.57-0.98], p = 0.04). If one area where the programme was ineffective was excluded, the reduction was 38% (0.62 [0.46-0.83), p = 0.001). A decrease in rates of parasitaemia and high-density parasitaemia, an increase in mean packed-cell volume (rate ratio 0.75 [95% CI 0.59-0.98], p = 0.04) and an improvement in the nutritional status of children living in treated villages were also detected. In a country such as The Gambia, where nets were widely used and which has a good primary health care system, it is possible to achieve insecticide-treatment of bednets at a national level with a significant reduction in child mortality; but at a cost which the country cannot afford.
The Lancet | 1995
Umberto D'Alessandro; A. Leach; B.O. Olaleye; Greg Fegan; Musa Jawara; P. Langerock; Brian Greenwood; Chris Drakeley; Geoffrey Targett; M.O. George; S. Bennett
SPf66 malaria vaccine is a synthetic protein with aminoacid sequences derived from pre-erythrocytic and asexual blood-stage proteins of Plasmodium falciparum. SPf66 was found to have a 31% protective efficacy in an area of intensive malaria transmission in Tanzanian children, 1-5 years old. We report a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of SPf66 against clinical P falciparum malaria in Gambian infants. 630 children, aged 6-11 months at time of the first dose, received three doses of SPf66 or injected polio vaccine (IPV). Morbidity was monitored during the following rainy season by means of active and passive case detection. Cross-sectional surveys were carried out at the beginning and at the end of the rainy season. An episode of clinical malaria was defined as fever (> or = 37.5 degrees C) and a parasite density of 6000/microL or more. Analysis of efficacy was done on 547 children (316 SPf66/231 IPV). No differences in mortality or in health centre admissions were found between the two groups of children. 347 clinical episodes of malaria were detected during the three and a half months of surveillance. SPf66 vaccine was associated with a protective efficacy against the first or only clinical episode of 8% (95% CI -18 to 29, p = 0.50) and against the overall incidence of clinical episodes of malaria of 3% (95% CI -24 to 24, p = 0.81). No significant differences in parasite rates or in any other index of malaria were found between the two groups of children. The findings of this study differ from previous reports on SPf66 efficacy from South America and from Tanzania. In The Gambia, protection against clinical attacks of malaria during the rainy season after immunisation in children 6-11 months old at time of the first dose was not achieved.
Population and Development Review | 1994
Caroline H. Bledsoe; Allan G. Hill; Umberto D'Alessandro; P. Langerock
In 1992 in 41 villages in the North Bank region of rural Gambia researchers interviewed 2979 15-54 year old women to examine the means by which this population maintains natural fertility birth intervals. Only 3.3% had ever had formal schooling. The total fertility rate was 7.5. Criteria the women used in their decision making process about contraception included effectiveness confidentiality speed with which fecundity returns after the practice ends and risk of long-term fertility impairment. Women practice postpartum abstinence for 5-7 months. Birth intervals were around 33 months. Just 5.4% of all married women with at least 1 child used Western contraceptive methods (i.e. oral contraceptives the condom or Depo-Provera). Most of the use of Western contraceptives (55%) occurred within 18 months postpartum especially 12-17 months the time when most womens fecundity returns. Few women used them for more than a few months however. After 30 months they stopped using all forms of preventing pregnancy (Western local and abstinence) suggesting that they do not intend to reduce fertility but to control its timing. Most contraceptors (69%) who had had sex in the last month used a Western contraceptive compared to just 33% of those who were not sexually active. Women were most likely to use any contraception once they begin to supplement breast milk with other foods and least likely once they wean the child indicating that they are planning for another pregnancy. Even though younger women of higher parity (5-6) were more likely to use any contraception than older women of even higher parity (9-10) they were more likely to use abstinence or traditional means to assure a return to fertility. Among older high-parity women Depo-Provera was the most common method surpassing traditional methods. These findings show that women actively find means to use Western methods to achieve a 2 year minimum birth interval which essentially does not change birth intervals and total fertility.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1996
Umberto D'Alessandro; P. Langerock; S. Bennett; N. Francis; Kabir Cham; Brian Greenwood
In 1992, the Gambian national impregnated bed net programme (NIBP) introduced insecticide treatment of bed nets into half of the primary health care villages in The Gambia. One component of the evaluation of this programme was the determination of whether it had any impact on the outcome of pregnancy in primigravidae. From February 1992, 651 primigravidae were recruited into the study. Less than 50% of them used an insecticide-treated bednet. During the rainy season the prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum among primigravidae was lower, fewer babies were classified as premature, and the mean birth weight was higher in villages where treated bed nets were used than in control villages. Therefore, during the rainy season, despite the low use of insecticide-treated bed nets by Gambian primigravidae, the NIBP had some impact on the outcome of pregnancy, particularly on the percentage of premature babies, and this was probably due to the decreased risk of malaria infection achieved during this period.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1995
Umberto D'Alessandro; B.O. Olaleye; W. McGuire; Madeleine C. Thomson; P. Langerock; S. Bennett; Brian Greenwood
An evaluation of the Gambian national insecticide bed net programme, which has introduced insecticide treatment of bed nets into all primary health care (PHC) villages in The Gambia, provided an opportunity to compare the individual risk of malaria in children who slept under untreated or insecticide-treated bed nets. 2300 children 1-4 years old were selected for a survey at the end of the 1992 rainy season, 1500 from PHC villages and 800 from non-PHC villages. All malariometric indices were lower, and the mean packed cell volume was higher, in children who slept regularly under treated or untreated bed nets than in those who did not use a net. This study suggested that untreated bed nets provide some individual protection against malaria, although not as efficiently as that provided by insecticide-treated bed nets which were particularly effective at preventing infections accompanied by high parasitaemia.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1994
Madeleine C. Thomson; Umberto D'Alessandro; S. Bennett; Stephen J. Connor; P. Langerock; Musa Jawara; Jim Todd; Brian Greenwood
Baseline epidemiological and entomological studies were conducted in 5 different areas of The Gambia before the introduction of a national malaria control programme, the objective of which was to treat all the bed nets belonging to people living in primary health care villages with insecticide. All malariometric indices used (parasite density, parasite rates, splenomegaly, and packed cell volume) indicated that malaria transmission was more intense in the east of the country than elsewhere. High transmission in the east was associated with a high sporozoite rate but not with the greatest vector abundance; the lowest malaria prevalence rates were found in villages which were close to very productive breeding sites of Anopheles gambiae s.l. Bed net usage was strongly correlated with vector density and the highest malaria rates were found in villages where bed net usage was relatively low. These results suggest that in The Gambia malaria prevalence rates are reduced where nuisance biting by mosquitoes is sufficient to encourage the population to protect themselves with bed nets.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1998
B.O. Olaleye; L.A. Williams; Umberto D'Alessandro; M.M. Weber; K. Mulholland; C. Okorie; P. Langerock; S. Bennett; Brian Greenwood
Diagnosis of malaria in children is difficult without laboratory support because the symptoms and signs of malaria overlap with those of other febrile illnesses such as pneumonia. Nevertheless, in many parts of Africa diagnosis of malaria must be made without laboratory investigation. Therefore, a scoring system has been developed to assist peripheral health care workers in making this diagnosis. Four hundred and seven Gambian children aged 6 months to 9 years who presented to a rural clinic with fever or a recent history of fever were investigated. A diagnosis of malaria was made in 159 children who had a fever of 38 degrees C or more and malaria parasitaemia of 5000 parasites/microL or more. Symptoms and signs in children with malaria were compared with those in children with other febrile illnesses to identify features which predicted malaria. Symptoms and signs were incorporated into various logistic regression models to test which were best independent predictors of malaria and these regression models were used to construct simple scoring systems which predicted malaria. A nine terms model predicted clinical malaria with a sensitivity of 89% and a specificity of 61%, values comparable to those obtained by an experienced paediatrician without laboratory support. The ability of peripheral health care workers to diagnose malaria using this approach is now being investigated in a prospective study.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1996
W. McGuire; Umberto D'Alessandro; B.O. Olaleye; Madeleine C. Thomson; P. Langerock; Brian Greenwood; David J. Kwiatkowski
When cross-sectional surveys are used to evaluate malaria intervention programmes in the community, the prevalence of morbidity is difficult to assess because of the fluctuating nature of malarial fever. We have therefore investigated the impact of bed net usage on 2 surrogate markers of malarial morbidity: (i) elevated C-reactive protein (CRP) (> 8 mg/L) plus detectable parasitaemia, as an indicator of malaria-induced acute-phase response; and (ii) reduced haptoglobin levels (< 180 mg/L), which in this population indicates malaria-induced intravascular haemolysis. Among 1505 Gambian children 1-5 years old, examined on a single occasion at the end of the malarial transmission season, 5% had parasitaemia plus fever, while 24% had parasitaemia plus elevated CRP, and 35% had low haptoglobin. The proportion of children who had parasitaemia plus elevated CRP was significantly lower among those who had slept under insecticide-treated bed nets than among those who did not use a bed net (16% vs. 34%, P < 0.003), and the proportion with low haptoglobin differed similarly (24% vs. 49%, P < 0.003). Use of an untreated bed net had a weaker effect on both indices (22% had parasitaemia plus elevated CRP, 34% had low haptoglobin). CRP and haptoglobin are simple and inexpensive to measure in large numbers of people, and these results suggest that they could be useful for the assessment of malaria intervention programmes.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1994
A.M. Greenwood; C. Menendez; P.L. Alonso; S. Jaffar; P. Langerock; S. Lulat; Jim Todd; B. M'Boge; N. Francis; Brian Greenwood
The harmful effects of malaria are most pronounced during first pregnancies and chemoprophylaxis is most effective when given at this time. However, restriction of chemoprophylaxis to first pregnancies might lead to enhanced susceptibility to malaria during second pregnancies. We have investigated this possibility by studying the outcome of second pregnancies in 165 Gambian women who had received either malaria chemoprophylaxis with Maloprim or placebo during their first pregnancy. Many of these primigravidae did not present until the third trimester of pregnancy so that some are likely to have experienced a malaria infection before they started medication. The prevalence of malaria infection of the blood and of the placenta during second pregnancies was similar in women who had received chemoprophylaxis during their first pregnancy and in those who had not, and the mean birth weights of babies born to women in each group were almost identical. Thus, in areas where the epidemiology of malaria is similar to that of The Gambia and where most women present relatively late in pregnancy, it may be possible to restrict malaria chemoprophylaxis to first pregnancies with consequent savings in cost and a reduction in drug pressure on Plasmodium falciparum.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1998
W. McGuire; Umberto D'Alessandro; S. Stephens; B.O. Olaleye; P. Langerock; Brian Greenwood; Dominic P. Kwiatkowski
The pyrogenic cytokine, tumour necrosis factor (TNF), is a mediator of malaria fever. Since high plasma levels of TNF are sometimes found in afebrile individuals with Plasmodium falciparum parasitaemia, it has been suggested that soluble forms of TNF receptors (sTNF-R55 and sTNF-R75) in the plasma may act to inhibit the pyrogenic effect of TNF. We have investigated plasma levels of TNF, sTNF-R55 and sTNF-R75 in relation to episodes of malaria fever detected in a cross-sectional study of 313 rural Gambian children during the malaria transmission season. Levels of TNF were significantly higher in the 20 children who had parasitaemia associated with fever than in 120 children who were afebrile despite malaria infection and 173 who had no detectable parasitaemia. In contrast, soluble TNF receptor levels did not differ between these clinical groups and, in a logistic regression model which included level of parasitaemia, we found TNF but not soluble TNF receptor levels to be associated with the presence of fever. These data support the role of TNF in malaria fever but suggest that soluble TNF receptors are not a major factor in modulating the fever.