Interleukin-5 levels in relation to malaria severity: a systematic review
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Malaria Journal
Abstract
Background The role of cytokines such as interleukin-5 (IL-5) in the pathogenesis of malaria remains unclear. This
systematic review sought to synthesize variations in IL-5 levels between severe and uncomplicated malaria, as well
as between malaria and controls not aficted with the disease.
Methods This systematic review was registered at the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews
(PROSPERO; CRD42022368773). Searches for studies that reported IL-5 levels in patients with malaria (any severity)
and/or uninfected individuals were performed in Web of Science, PubMed, EMBASE, Scopus, CENTRAL, and MEDLINE,
between 1st and 10th October, 2022. The risk of bias among all included studies was minimized using the Strength ening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) guidelines for reporting observational stud ies. The diferences in IL-5 levels between malaria and uninfected controls, and between severe and uncomplicated
malaria were synthesized by narrative synthesis.
Results Among 1177 articles identifed in the databases, 23 matched the eligibility criteria and were included in this
systematic review. Qualitative syntheses showed the heterogeneity of IL-5 levels between diferent severities of clini cal malaria and uninfected controls. The majority of the included studies (12/15 studies, 80%) found no change
in IL-5 levels between malaria cases and uninfected controls. Similarly, most studies found no diference in IL-5 levels
between severe (regardless of complications) and uncomplicated malaria (4/8 studies, 50%). The qualitative syntheses
revealed that most studies found no diference in IL-5 levels between severe and non-severe malaria.
Conclusions The comprehensive review suggests that IL-5 levels are unchanged in patients with diferent levels
of clinical severity of malaria and uninfected controls. Given the limited number of published studies on IL-5 levels
in malaria, there is a need for additional research to determine the function of this cytokine in the pathogenesis
of malaria.
Description
Research Article