The current use of the artemisinin-based Combination Therapies in adult patients at a Tertiary Hospital, South-South Nigeria

Objective: The antimalarial preferences, tolerability, and cost of the Artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) among adult patients and caregivers are largely understudied despite being the recommended treatment for Plasmodium falciparum. We, therefore, evaluated antimalarial preferences, to...

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Main Authors: STEPHEN AYINBUOMWAN, Abimbola Opadeyi, Ambose Isah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Babcock Medical Society 2022-12-01
Series:Babcock University Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bumj.babcock.edu.ng/index.php/bumj/article/view/145
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author STEPHEN AYINBUOMWAN
Abimbola Opadeyi
Ambose Isah
author_facet STEPHEN AYINBUOMWAN
Abimbola Opadeyi
Ambose Isah
author_sort STEPHEN AYINBUOMWAN
collection DOAJ
description Objective: The antimalarial preferences, tolerability, and cost of the Artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) among adult patients and caregivers are largely understudied despite being the recommended treatment for Plasmodium falciparum. We, therefore, evaluated antimalarial preferences, tolerability, and cost of the ACTs among adult patients attending the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, Nigeria.  Methods: This was a cross-sectional study conducted among adult patients and their caregivers at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, Nigeria, using a semi-structured questionnaire. Their preferred antimalarial medication, previous use of antimalarial monotherapies, current ACT use; cost considerations, and adverse effects profile were sought. Result: Six hundred respondents were recruited with a mean age of 41.4±16.3years and M/F ratio of 1.4. The majority (88.0 %), reported that they had between 1-5 episodes of malaria fever in a year. Only 28.2% received doctors’ prescriptions while 85.8% purchased their antimalarial medications from a pharmacy. Sixty percent of the respondents used at least one ACT; mainly Artemether-Lumefantrine (AL) 312 (52.0%). Only 9.3% reported previous adverse effects with the ACTs with 4.0% of respondents discontinuing their medications. The mean (SD) cost of purchasing ACTs was 1,516.47±760.3 (3.65 USD) Naira. Conclusion: This study showed adult patients’ preference for the ACTs, especially Artemether-Lumefantrine despite some inclination towards antimalarial monotherapies and parenteral route. There was also a high rate of use of malaria presumptive treatment, but only a few reported adverse effects. There is a need to make ACTs affordable because the cost is still presently high for most Nigerians.
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spelling doaj.art-d14fcccf31044e5aaf217176b21e80d32023-01-08T15:57:33ZengBabcock Medical SocietyBabcock University Medical Journal2465-66662756-46572022-12-015210.38029/babcockunivmedj.v5i2.145The current use of the artemisinin-based Combination Therapies in adult patients at a Tertiary Hospital, South-South NigeriaSTEPHEN AYINBUOMWAN0Abimbola Opadeyi1Ambose Isah2UNIVERSITY OF BENINUniversity of BeninUniversity of Benin Objective: The antimalarial preferences, tolerability, and cost of the Artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) among adult patients and caregivers are largely understudied despite being the recommended treatment for Plasmodium falciparum. We, therefore, evaluated antimalarial preferences, tolerability, and cost of the ACTs among adult patients attending the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, Nigeria.  Methods: This was a cross-sectional study conducted among adult patients and their caregivers at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, Nigeria, using a semi-structured questionnaire. Their preferred antimalarial medication, previous use of antimalarial monotherapies, current ACT use; cost considerations, and adverse effects profile were sought. Result: Six hundred respondents were recruited with a mean age of 41.4±16.3years and M/F ratio of 1.4. The majority (88.0 %), reported that they had between 1-5 episodes of malaria fever in a year. Only 28.2% received doctors’ prescriptions while 85.8% purchased their antimalarial medications from a pharmacy. Sixty percent of the respondents used at least one ACT; mainly Artemether-Lumefantrine (AL) 312 (52.0%). Only 9.3% reported previous adverse effects with the ACTs with 4.0% of respondents discontinuing their medications. The mean (SD) cost of purchasing ACTs was 1,516.47±760.3 (3.65 USD) Naira. Conclusion: This study showed adult patients’ preference for the ACTs, especially Artemether-Lumefantrine despite some inclination towards antimalarial monotherapies and parenteral route. There was also a high rate of use of malaria presumptive treatment, but only a few reported adverse effects. There is a need to make ACTs affordable because the cost is still presently high for most Nigerians. https://bumj.babcock.edu.ng/index.php/bumj/article/view/145ArtemisininAdultAntimalarialMalariaNigeria
spellingShingle STEPHEN AYINBUOMWAN
Abimbola Opadeyi
Ambose Isah
The current use of the artemisinin-based Combination Therapies in adult patients at a Tertiary Hospital, South-South Nigeria
Babcock University Medical Journal
Artemisinin
Adult
Antimalarial
Malaria
Nigeria
title The current use of the artemisinin-based Combination Therapies in adult patients at a Tertiary Hospital, South-South Nigeria
title_full The current use of the artemisinin-based Combination Therapies in adult patients at a Tertiary Hospital, South-South Nigeria
title_fullStr The current use of the artemisinin-based Combination Therapies in adult patients at a Tertiary Hospital, South-South Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed The current use of the artemisinin-based Combination Therapies in adult patients at a Tertiary Hospital, South-South Nigeria
title_short The current use of the artemisinin-based Combination Therapies in adult patients at a Tertiary Hospital, South-South Nigeria
title_sort current use of the artemisinin based combination therapies in adult patients at a tertiary hospital south south nigeria
topic Artemisinin
Adult
Antimalarial
Malaria
Nigeria
url https://bumj.babcock.edu.ng/index.php/bumj/article/view/145
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