%0 Journal Article %9 ACL : Articles dans des revues avec comité de lecture répertoriées par l'AERES %A Guemouri, Sayeh %A Dégbègni, R. %A Courtois, L. %A Accrombessi, M. %A Massougbodji, A. %A Ding, X. C. %A Tuikue Ndam, Nicaise %A Mama, A. %A Fievet, Nadine %A Sarrasin-Hubert, V. %A Cotrell, G. %A Briand, Valérie %T Dynamics of persistent submicroscopic and microscopic Plasmodium falciparum in pregnant women under intermittent preventive treatment : a study cohort in Benin %D 2025 %L fdi:010092616 %G ENG %J Open Forum Infectious Diseases %@ 2328-8957 %K intermittent preventive treatment ; msp-2 fragment analysis method ; plasmodium falciparum ; pregnancy ; submicroscopic %K BENIN ; AFRIQUE SUBSAHARIENNE %M ISI:001399230300001 %N 1 %P ofae762 [9 ] %R 10.1093/ofid/ofae762 %U https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010092616 %> https://horizon.documentation.ird.fr/exl-doc/pleins_textes/2025-02/010092616.pdf %V 12 %W Horizon (IRD) %X Background Malaria infections in pregnancy are a major cause of maternal morbidity and neonatal mortality in sub-Saharan Africa. A high proportion of these infections are submicroscopic, which are usually asymptomatic and therefore untreated during pregnancy. Intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (IPTp-SP) aims to prevent and treat all potential infections whether submicroscopic or not. However, the resistance of parasites to SP is steadily increasing. The dynamic of microscopic and submicroscopic infections in a cohort of Beninese women throughout their pregnancy and its relation to IPTp-SP has been assessed.Methods As a subsample of the RECIPAL project, 130 women with at least 2 infections detected by polymerase chain reaction during their pregnancy were included. Infections were categorized as new (isolated) or persistent based on msp-2 genotyping, where persistent infections had identical genotypes in all studied time points. Submicroscopic infections were defined as polymerase chain reaction-positive and thick blood smear-negative. The persistence of infections according to IPTp-SP uptake was assessed.Results A total of 73.1% of women (95 women of 130) had exclusively persistent infections throughout their pregnancy, whereas only 7.7% (10 of 130) had exclusively new infections. During pregnancy, the median time spent with 1 persistent infection was 7.2 weeks. A considerable proportion of these persistent infections 64.3% (72 of 113) was only submicroscopic. Approximately 20% of these persistent infections occurred despite the use of IPTp-SP.Conclusions Using new antimalarial combinations could contribute to limit the persistence of submicroscopic infections and their probable negative effects on the mother and the fetus. Intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine prevents malaria in pregnant women in Africa. A sensitive genotyping method shows that a considerable number of women have persistent infections throughout pregnancy despite this treatment. Using new antimalarial combinations could contribute to limit this persistence. %$ 050 ; 052