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Antimalarial medication

Antimalarial medications or simply antimalarials are a type of antiparasitic chemical agent, often naturally derived, that can be used to treat or to prevent malaria, in the latter case, most often aiming at two susceptible target groups, young children and pregnant women.[1] As of 2018, modern treatments, including for severe malaria, continued to depend on therapies deriving historically from quinine and artesunate, both parenteral (injectable) drugs, expanding from there into the many classes of available modern drugs.[1] Incidence and distribution of the disease ("malaria burden") is expected to remain high, globally, for many years to come; moreover, known antimalarial drugs have repeatedly been observed to elicit resistance in the malaria parasite—including for combination therapies featuring artemisinin, a drug of last resort, where resistance has now been observed in Southeast Asia.[1] As such, the needs for new antimalarial agents and new strategies of treatment (e.g., new combination therapies) remain important priorities in tropical medicine.[1] As well, despite very positive outcomes from many modern treatments, serious side effects can impact some individuals taking standard doses (e.g., retinopathy with chloroquine, acute haemolytic anaemia with tafenoquine).[2][3][1]

Specifically, antimalarial drugs may be used to treat malaria in three categories of individuals, (i) those with suspected or confirmed infection, (ii) those visiting a malaria-endemic regions who have no immunity, to prevent infection via malaria prophylaxis, and (iii) or in broader groups of individuals, in routine but intermittent preventative treatment in regions where malaria is endemic via intermittent preventive therapy.[not verified in body] Practice in treating cases of malaria is most often based on the concept of combination therapy[verification needed] (e.g., using agents such as artemether and lumefantrine against chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum infection[verification needed][4]), since this offers advantages including reduced risk of treatment failure, reduced risk of developed resistance, as well as the possibility of reduced side-effects.[not verified in body] Prompt parasitological confirmation by microscopy, or alternatively by rapid diagnostic tests, is recommended in all patients suspected of malaria before treatment is started.[5][page needed] Treatment solely on the basis of clinical suspicion is considered when a parasitological diagnosis is not possible.[5][page needed]

Anti-malaria aid campaigns have a globally positive impact for health outcomes and beyond.[6]

Medications edit

It is practical to consider antimalarials by chemical structure since this is associated with important properties of each drug, such as mechanism of action.[citation needed]

Quinine and related agents edit

Quinine has a long history stretching from Peru, and the discovery of the cinchona tree, and the potential uses of its bark, to the current day[when?] and a collection of derivatives that are still frequently used in the prevention and treatment of malaria. Quinine is an alkaloid that acts as a blood schizonticidal and weak gametocide against Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium malariae. As an alkaloid, it is accumulated in the food vacuoles of Plasmodium species, especially Plasmodium falciparum. It acts by inhibiting the hemozoin biocrystallization, thus facilitating an aggregation of cytotoxic heme. Quinine is less effective and more toxic as a blood schizonticidal agent than chloroquine; however, it is still very effective and widely used in the treatment of acute cases of severe P. falciparum. It is especially useful in areas where there is known to be a high level of resistance to chloroquine, mefloquine, and sulfa drug combinations with pyrimethamine. Quinine is also used in post-exposure treatment of individuals returning from an area where malaria is endemic.

The treatment regimen of quinine is complex and is determined largely by the parasite's level of resistance and the reason for drug therapy (i.e. acute treatment or prophylaxis). The World Health Organization recommendation for quinine is 20 mg/kg first times and 10 mg/kg every eight hours for five days where parasites are sensitive to quinine, combined with doxycycline, tetracycline or clindamycin. Doses can be given by oral, intravenous or intramuscular routes. The suggested course of action is determined by the need for therapy and the available resources (i.e. sterilised needles for IV or IM injections).

Use of quinine is characterised by a frequently experienced syndrome called cinchonism. Tinnitus (a hearing impairment), rashes, vertigo, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain are the most common symptoms. Neurological effects are experienced in some cases due to the drug's neurotoxic properties. These actions are mediated through the interactions of quinine causing a decrease in the excitability of the motor neuron end plates. This often results in functional impairment of the eighth cranial nerve, resulting in confusion, delirium and coma. Quinine can cause hypoglycaemia through its action of stimulating insulin secretion; this occurs in therapeutic doses and therefore it is advised that glucose levels are monitored in all patients every 4–6 hours. This effect can be exaggerated in pregnancy and therefore additional care in administering and monitoring the dosage is essential. Repeated or over-dosage can result in kidney failure and death through depression of the respiratory system.

Quinimax and quinidine are the two most commonly used alkaloids related to quinine in the treatment or prevention of malaria. Quinimax is a combination of four alkaloids (quinine, quinidine, cinchonine and cinchonidine). This combination has been shown in several studies to be more effective than quinine, supposedly due to a synergistic action among the four cinchona derivatives. Quinidine is a direct derivative of quinine. It is a distereoisomer, thus having similar anti-malarial properties to the parent compound. Quinidine is recommended only for the treatment of severe cases of malaria.

Warburg's tincture was a febrifuge developed by Carl Warburg in 1834, which included quinine as a key ingredient. In the 19th-century it was a well-known anti-malarial drug. Although originally sold as a secret medicine, Warburg's tincture was highly regarded by many eminent medical professionals who considered it as being superior to quinine (e.g. Surgeon-General W. C. Maclean, Professor of Military Medicine at British Army Medical School, Netley). Warburg's tincture appeared in Martindale: The complete drug reference from 1883 until about 1920. The formula was published in The Lancet 1875.[7]

Chloroquine edit

Chloroquine was, until recently, the most widely used anti-malarial. It was the original prototype from which most methods of treatment are derived. It is also the least expensive, best tested and safest of all available drugs. The emergence of drug-resistant parasitic strains is rapidly decreasing its effectiveness; however, it is still the first-line drug of choice in most sub-Saharan African countries. It is now suggested that it is used in combination with other antimalarial drugs to extend its effective usage. Popular drugs based on chloroquine phosphate (also called nivaquine) are Chloroquine FNA, Resochin and Dawaquin.

Chloroquine is a 4-aminoquinolone compound with a complicated and still unclear mechanism of action. It is believed to reach high concentrations in the vacuoles of the parasite, which, due to its alkaline nature, raises the internal pH. It controls the conversion of toxic heme to hemozoin by inhibiting the biocrystallization of hemozoin, thus poisoning the parasite through excess levels of toxicity. Other potential mechanisms through which it may act include interfering with the biosynthesis of parasitic nucleic acids and the formation of a chloroquine-haem or chloroquine-DNA complex. The most significant level of activity found is against all forms of the schizonts (with the obvious exception of chloroquine-resistant P. falciparum and P. vivax strains) and the gametocytes of P. vivax, P. malariae, P. ovale as well as the immature gametocytes of P. falciparum. Chloroquine also has a significant anti-pyretic and anti-inflammatory effect when used to treat P. vivax infections, and thus it may still remain useful even when resistance is more widespread. According to a report on the Science and Development Network website's sub-Saharan Africa section, there is very little drug resistance among children infected with malaria on the island of Madagascar, but what drug resistance there is exists against chloroquinine.

Children and adults should receive 25 mg of chloroquine per kg given over three days. A pharmacokinetically superior regime, recommended by the WHO, involves giving an initial dose of 10 mg/kg followed 6–8 hours later by 5 mg/kg, then 5 mg/kg on the following two days. For chemoprophylaxis: 5 mg/kg/week (single dose) or 10 mg/kg/week divided into six daily doses is advised. Chloroquine is only recommended as a prophylactic drug in regions only affected by P. vivax and sensitive P. falciparum strains. Chloroquine has been used in the treatment of malaria for many years and no abortifacient or teratogenic effects have been reported during this time; therefore, it is considered very safe to use during pregnancy. However, itching can occur at intolerable level and Chloroquinine can be a provocation factor of psoriasis.

Hydroxychloroquine edit

Hydroxychloroquine was derived in the 1950s by adding a hydroxy group to existing Chloroquine, making it more tolerable than Chloroquine by itself.[8][9][10]

Amodiaquine edit

Amodiaquine is a 4-aminoquinolone anti-malarial drug similar in structure and mechanism of action to chloroquine. Amodiaquine has tended to be administered in areas of chloroquine resistance while some patients prefer its tendency to cause less itching than chloroquine. Amodiaquine is now available in a combined formulation with artesunate (ASAQ) and is among the artemisinin-combination therapies recommended by the World Health Organization. Combination with sulfadoxine=pyrimethamine is not recommended.[5]

The drug should be given in doses between 25 mg/kg and 35 mg/kg over three days in a similar method to that used in chloroquine administration. Adverse reactions are generally similar in severity and type to that seen in chloroquine treatment.[11] In addition, bradycardia, itching, nausea, vomiting and some abdominal pain have been recorded. Some blood and hepatic disorders have also been seen in a small number of patients.[11]

Pyrimethamine edit

Pyrimethamine is used in the treatment of uncomplicated malaria. It is particularly useful in cases of chloroquine-resistant P. falciparum strains when combined with sulfadoxine.[12] It acts by inhibiting dihydrofolate reductase in the parasite thus preventing the biosynthesis of purines and pyrimidines, thereby halting the processes of DNA replication, cell division and reproduction. It acts primarily on the schizonts during the erythrocytic phase, and nowadays is only used in concert with a sulfonamide[12]

Proguanil edit

Proguanil (chloroguanide) is a biguanide; a synthetic derivative of pyrimidine. It was developed in 1945 by a British Antimalarial research group. It has many mechanisms of action but primarily is mediated through conversion to the active metabolite cycloguanil. This inhibits the malarial dihydrofolate reductase enzyme. Its most prominent effect is on the primary tissue stages of P. falciparum, P. vivax and P. ovale. It has no known effect against hypnozoites therefore is not used in the prevention of relapse. It has a weak blood schizonticidal activity and is not recommended for therapy of acute infection. However it is useful in prophylaxis when combined with atovaquone or chloroquine (in areas where there is no chloroquine resistance). 3 mg/kg is the advised dosage per day, (hence approximate adult dosage is 200 mg).[13] The pharmacokinetic profile of the drugs indicates that a half dose, twice daily maintains the plasma levels with a greater level of consistency, thus giving a greater level of protection. The proguanil- chloroquine combination does not provide effective protection against resistant strains of P. falciparum. There are very few side effects to proguanil, with slight hair loss and mouth ulcers being occasionally reported following prophylactic use.[13] Proguanil hydrochloride is marketed as Paludrine by AstraZeneca.

Sulfonamides edit

Sulfadoxine and sulfamethoxypyridazine are specific inhibitors of the enzyme dihydropteroate synthetase in the tetrahydrofolate synthesis pathway of malaria parasites. They are structural analogs of p-aminobenzoic acid (PABA) and compete with PABA to block its conversion to dihydrofolic acid. Sulfonamides act on the schizont stages of the erythrocytic (asexual) cycle. When administered alone sulfonamides are not efficacious in treating malaria but co-administration with the antifolate pyrimethamine, most commonly as fixed-dose sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (Fansidar), produces synergistic effects sufficient to cure sensitive strains of malaria.

Sulfonamides are not recommended for chemoprophylaxis because of rare but severe skin reactions experienced. However it is used frequently for clinical episodes of the disease.

Mefloquine edit

Mefloquine was developed during the Vietnam War and is chemically related to quinine. It was developed to protect American troops against multi-drug resistant P. falciparum. It is a very potent blood schizonticide with a long half-life. It is thought to act by forming toxic heme complexes that damage parasitic food vacuoles. Mefloquine is effective in prophylaxis and for acute therapy. It is now used solely for the prevention of resistant strains of P. falciparum (usually combined with Artesunate) despite being effective against P. vivax, P. ovale and P. marlariae. Chloroquine/proguanil or sulfa drug-pyrimethamine combinations should be used in all other plasmodia infections.

The major commercial manufacturer of mefloquine-based malaria treatment is Roche Pharmaceuticals, which markets the drug under the trade name "Lariam". Lariam is fairly expensive at around three € per tablet (pricing of the year 2000).

A dose of 15–25 mg/kg is recommended, depending on the prevalence of mefloquine resistance. The increased dosage is associated with a much greater level of intolerance, most noticeably in young children; with the drug inducing vomiting and esophagitis. It was not recommended for use during the first trimester, although considered safe during the second and third trimesters; nevertheless, in October 2011, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) changed its recommendation and approved use of Mefloquine for both prophylaxis and treatment of malaria in all trimesters, after the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) changed its categorization from C to B. Mefloquine frequently produces side effects, including nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain and dizziness. Several associations with neurological events have been made, namely affective and anxiety disorders, hallucinations, sleep disturbances, psychosis, toxic encephalopathy, convulsions and delirium. Cardiovascular effects have been recorded with bradycardia and sinus arrhythmia being consistently recorded in 68% of patients treated with mefloquine (in one hospital-based study).

Mefloquine can only be taken for a period up to six months due to side effects. After this, other drugs (such as those based on paludrine/nivaquine) again need to be taken.[14][medical citation needed]

Atovaquone edit

Atovaquone is available in combination with proguanil under the name Malarone, albeit at a price higher than Lariam. It is commonly used in prophylaxis by travelers and used to treat falciparum malaria in developed countries. A liquid oral suspension of Atovaquone is available under the name Mepron.

Primaquine edit

Primaquine is a highly active 8-aminoquinolone that is effective against P. falcipraum gametocytes but also acts on merozoites in the bloodstream and on hypnozoites, the dormant hepatic forms of P. vivax and P. ovale.[15] It is the only known drug to cure both relapsing malaria infections and acute cases. The mechanism of action is not fully understood but it is thought to block oxidative metabolism in Plasmodia. It can also be combined with methylene blue.[16]

For the prevention of relapse in P. vivax and P. ovale 0.15 mg/kg should be given for 14 days. As a gametocytocidal drug in P. falciparum infections a single dose of 0.75 mg/kg repeated seven days later is sufficient. This treatment method is only used in conjunction with another effective blood schizonticidal drug. There are few significant side effects although it has been shown that primaquine may cause anorexia, nausea, vomiting, cramps, chest weakness, anaemia, some suppression of myeloid activity and abdominal pains. In cases of over-dosage granulocytopenia may occur.[citation needed]

Artemisinin and derivatives edit

Artemisinin is a Chinese herb (qinghaosu) that has been used in the treatment of fevers for over 1,000 years.[17] It is derived from the plant Artemisia annua, with the first documentation as a successful therapeutic agent in the treatment of malaria is in 340 AD by Ge Hong in his book Zhou Hou Bei Ji Fang (A Handbook of Prescriptions for Emergencies).[18] Ge Hong extracted the artemesinin using a simple macerate, and this method is still in use today.[19] The active compound was first isolated in 1971 and named artemisinin.

  • Artemisinin has a very rapid action and the vast majority of acute patients treated show significant improvement within 1–3 days of receiving treatment.[citation needed] It has demonstrated the fastest clearance of all anti-malarials currently[when?] used and acts primarily on the trophozoite phase, thus preventing progression of the disease.[citation needed] Semi-synthetic artemisinin derivatives (e.g. artesunate, artemether) are easier to use than the parent compound and are converted rapidly once in the body to the active compound dihydroartemesinin.[citation needed] On the first day of treatment 20 mg/kg is often given, and the dose then reduced to 10 mg/kg per day for the six following days.[citation needed] Few side effects are associated with artemesinin use.[citation needed] However, headaches, nausea, vomiting, abnormal bleeding, dark urine, itching and some drug fever have been reported by a small number of patients.[citation needed] Some cardiac changes were reported during a clinical trial, notably non specific ST changes and a first degree atrioventricular block (these disappeared when the patients recovered from the malarial fever).[citation needed]
  • Artemether is a methyl ether derivative of dihydroartemesinin. It is similar to artemesinin in mode of action but demonstrates a reduced ability as a hypnozoiticidal compound, instead acting more significantly to decrease gametocyte carriage. Similar restrictions are in place, as with artemesinin, to prevent the development of resistance, therefore it is only used in combination therapy for severe acute cases of drug-resistant P. falciparum. It should be administered in a 7-day course with 4 mg/kg given per day for three days, followed by 1.6 mg/kg for three days. Side effects of the drug are few but include potential neurotoxicity developing if high doses are given.[citation needed]
  • Artesunate is a hemisuccinate derivative of the active metabolite dihydroartemisin. Currently[when?] it is the most frequently used of all the artemesinin-type drugs. Its only effect is mediated through a reduction in the gametocyte transmission. It is used in combination therapy and is effective in cases of uncomplicated P. falciparum. The dosage recommended by the WHO is a five or seven day course (depending on the predicted adherence level) of 4 mg/kg for three days (usually given in combination with mefloquine) followed by 2 mg/kg for the remaining two or four days. In large studies carried out on over 10,000 patients in Thailand no adverse effects have been shown.[citation needed]
  • Dihydroartemisinin is the active metabolite to which artemesinin is reduced. It is the most effective artemesinin compound and the least stable. It has a strong blood schizonticidal action and reduces gametocyte transmission. It is used for therapeutic treatment of cases of resistant and uncomplicated P. falciparum. 4 mg/kg doses are recommended on the first day of therapy followed by 2 mg/kg for six days. As with artesunate, no side effects to treatment have thus far been recorded.[citation needed]
  • Arteether is an ethyl ether derivative of dihydroartemisinin. It is used in combination therapy for cases of uncomplicated resistant P. falciparum. The recommended dosage is 150 mg/kg per day for three days given by IM injections. With the exception of a small number of cases demonstrating neurotoxicity following parenteral administration no side effects have been recorded.[citation needed]

Halofantrine edit

Halofantrine is a relatively new drug developed by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in the 1960s. It is a phenanthrene methanol, chemically related to Quinine and acts acting as a blood schizonticide effective against all Plasmodium parasites. Its mechanism of action is similar to other anti-malarials. Cytotoxic complexes are formed with ferritoporphyrin XI that cause plasmodial membrane damage. Despite being effective against drug resistant parasites, halofantrine is not commonly used in the treatment (prophylactic or therapeutic) of malaria due to its high cost. It has very variable bioavailability and has been shown to have potentially high levels of cardiotoxicity. It is still a useful drug and can be used in patients that are known to be free of heart disease and that have severe and resistant forms of acute malaria.[citation needed] A popular drug based on halofantrine is Halfan. The level of governmental control and the prescription-only basis on which it can be used contributes to the cost, thus halofantrine is not frequently used.

A dose of 8 mg/kg of halofantrine is advised to be given in three doses at six-hour intervals for the duration of the clinical episode. It is not recommended for children under 10 kg despite data supporting the use and demonstrating that it is well tolerated. The most frequently experienced side-effects include nausea, abdominal pain, diarrhea, and itch. Severe ventricular dysrhythmias, occasionally causing death are seen when high doses are administered. This is due to prolongation of the QTc interval. Halofantrine is not recommended for use in pregnancy and lactation, in small children, or in patients that have taken mefloquine previously.

Lumefantrine edit

Lumefantrine is a relative of halofantrine that is used in some combination antimalarial regimens.[20]

Doxycycline edit

Probably one of the more prevalent antimalarial drugs prescribed, due to its relative effectiveness and cheapness, doxycycline is a tetracycline compound derived from oxytetracycline. The tetracyclines were one of the earliest groups of antibiotics to be developed and are still used widely in many types of infection. It is a bacteriostatic agent that acts to inhibit the process of protein synthesis by binding to the 30S ribosomal subunit thus preventing the 50s and 30s units from bonding. Doxycycline is used primarily for chemoprophylaxis in areas where chloroquine resistance exists. It can also be used in combination with quinine to treat resistant cases of P. falciparum but has a very slow action in acute malaria, and should not be used as monotherapy.

When treating acute cases and given in combination with quinine; 100 mg of doxycycline should be given per day for seven days. In prophylactic therapy, 100 mg (adult dose) of doxycycline should be given every day during exposure to malaria.

The most commonly experienced side effects are permanent enamel hypoplasia (although this is only relevant during the period of tooth development during the first decade of life), transient depression of bone growth, gastrointestinal disturbances and some increased levels of photosensitivity. Due to its effect of bone and tooth growth it is not used in children under 8, pregnant or lactating women and those with a known hepatic dysfunction.

Tetracycline is only used in combination for the treatment of acute cases of P. falciparum infections. This is due to its slow onset. Unlike doxycycline it is not used in chemoprophylaxis. For tetracycline, 250 mg is the recommended adult dosage (it should not be used in children) for five or seven days depending on the level of adherence and compliance expected. Oesophageal ulceration, gastrointestinal upset and interferences with the process of ossification and depression of bone growth are known to occur. The majority of side effects associated with doxycycline are also experienced.

Clindamycin edit

Clindamycin is a derivative of lincomycin, with a slow action against blood schizonticides. It is only used in combination with quinine in the treatment of acute cases of resistant P. falciparum infections and not as a prophylactic. Being more toxic than the other antibiotic alternatives, it is used only in cases where the Tetracyclines are contraindicated (for example in children).

Clindamycin should be given in conjunction with quinine as a 300 mg dose (in adults) four times a day for five days. The only side effects recorded in patients taking clindamycin are nausea, vomiting and abdominal pains and cramps. However these can be alleviated by consuming large quantities of water and food when taking the drug. Pseudomembranous colitis (caused by Clostridium difficile) has also developed in some patients; this condition may be fatal in a small number of cases.

Resistance edit

Anti-malarial drug resistance has been defined as: "the ability of a parasite to survive and/or multiply despite the administration and absorption of a drug given in doses equal to or higher than those usually recommended but within tolerance of the subject. The drug in question must gain access to the parasite or the infected red blood cell for the duration of the time necessary for its normal action."[21] Resistance to antimalarial drugs is common.[22] In most instances this refers to parasites that remain following on from an observed treatment; thus, it excludes all cases where anti-malarial prophylaxis has failed.[citation needed] In order for a case to be defined as resistant, the patient in question must have received a known and observed anti-malarial therapy while the blood drug and metabolite concentrations are monitored concurrently; techniques used to demonstrate this include in vivo, in vitro, and animal model testing, and more recently developed molecular techniques.[citation needed]

Drug resistant parasites are often used to explain malaria treatment failure. However, they are two potentially very different clinical scenarios. The failure to clear parasitemia and recover from an acute clinical episode when a suitable treatment has been given is anti-malarial resistance in its true form. Drug resistance may lead to treatment failure, but treatment failure is not necessarily caused by drug resistance despite assisting with its development. A multitude of factors can be involved in the processes including problems with non-compliance and adherence, poor drug quality, interactions with other pharmaceuticals, poor absorption, misdiagnosis and incorrect doses being given. The majority of these factors also contribute to the development of drug resistance.

The generation of resistance can be complicated and varies between Plasmodium species. It is generally accepted to be initiated primarily through a spontaneous mutation that provides some evolutionary benefit, thus giving the anti-malarial used a reduced level of sensitivity. This can be caused by a single point mutation or multiple mutations. In most instances a mutation will be fatal for the parasite or the drug pressure will remove parasites that remain susceptible, however some resistant parasites will survive. Resistance can become firmly established within a parasite population, existing for long periods of time.

The first type of resistance to be acknowledged was to chloroquine in Thailand in 1957. The biological mechanism behind this resistance was subsequently discovered to be related to the development of an efflux mechanism that expels chloroquine from the parasite before the level required to effectively inhibit the process of haem polymerization (that is necessary to prevent buildup of the toxic byproducts formed by haemoglobin digestion). This theory has been supported by evidence showing that resistance can be effectively reversed on the addition of substances which halt the efflux. The resistance of other quinolone anti-malarials such as amodiaquine, mefloquine, halofantrine and quinine are thought to have occurred by similar mechanisms.

Plasmodium have developed resistance against antifolate combination drugs, the most commonly used being sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine. Two gene mutations are thought to be responsible, allowing synergistic blockages of two enzymes involved in folate synthesis. Regional variations of specific mutations give differing levels of resistance.

Atovaquone is recommended to be used only in combination with another anti-malarial compound as the selection of resistant parasites occurs very quickly when used in mono-therapy. Resistance is thought to originate from a single-point mutation in the gene coding for cytochrome-b.

Spread of resistance edit

There is no single factor that confers the greatest degree of influence on the spread of drug resistance, but a number of plausible causes associated with an increase have been acknowledged. These include aspects of economics, human behaviour, pharmacokinetics, and the biology of vectors and parasites.

The most influential causes are examined below:

  1. The biological influences are based on the parasites ability to survive the presence of an anti-malarial thus enabling the persistence of resistance and the potential for further transmission despite treatment. In normal circumstances any parasites that persist after treatment are destroyed by the host's immune system, therefore any factors that act to reduce the elimination of parasites could facilitate the development of resistance. This attempts to explain the poorer response associated with immunocompromised individuals, pregnant women and young children.
  2. There has been evidence to suggest that certain parasite-vector combinations can alternatively enhance or inhibit the transmission of resistant parasites, causing 'pocket-like' areas of resistance.
  3. The use of anti-malarials developed from similar basic chemical compounds can increase the rate of resistance development, for example cross-resistance to chloroquine and amodiaquine, two 4-aminoquinolones and mefloquine conferring resistance to quinine and halofantrine. This phenomenon may reduce the usefulness of newly developed therapies prior to large-scale usage.
  4. The resistance to anti-malarials may be increased by a process found in some species of Plasmodium, where a degree of phenotypic plasticity was exhibited, allowing the rapid development of resistance to a new drug, even if the drug has not been previously experienced.
  5. The pharmacokinetics of the chosen anti-malarial are key; the decision of choosing a long half-life over a drug that is metabolised quickly is complex and still remains unclear. Drugs with shorter half-life's require more frequent administration to maintain the correct plasma concentrations, therefore potentially presenting more problems if levels of adherence and compliance are unreliable, but longer-lasting drugs can increase the development of resistance due to prolonged periods of low drug concentration.
  6. The pharmacokinetics of anti-malarials is important when using combination therapy. Mismatched drug combinations, for example having an 'unprotected' period where one drug dominates can seriously increase the likelihood of selection for resistant parasites.
  7. Ecologically there is a linkage between the level of transmission and the development of resistance, however at present this still remains unclear.
  8. The treatment regime prescribed can have a substantial influence on the development of resistance. This can involve the drug intake, combination and interactions as well as the drug's pharmacokinetic and dynamic properties.

Prevention edit

The prevention of anti-malarial drug resistance is of enormous public health importance. It can be assumed that no therapy currently[when?] under development or to be developed in the foreseeable future will be totally protective against malaria. In accordance with this, there is the possibility of resistance developing to any given therapy that is developed. This is a serious concern, as the rate at which new drugs are produced by no means matches the rate of the development of resistance. In addition, the most newly developed therapeutics tend to be the most expensive and are required in the largest quantities by some of the poorest areas of the world. Therefore, it is apparent that the degree to which malaria can be controlled depends on the careful use of the existing drugs to limit, insofar as it is possible, any further development of resistance.

Provisions essential to this process include the delivery of fast primary care where staff are well trained and supported with the necessary supplies for efficient treatment. This in itself is inadequate in large areas where malaria is endemic thus presenting an initial problem. One method proposed that aims to avoid the fundamental lack in certain countries' health care infrastructure is the privatisation of some areas, thus enabling drugs to be purchased on the open market from sources that are not officially related to the health care industry. Although this is now gaining some support there are many problems related to limited access and improper drug use, which could potentially increase the rate of resistance development to an even greater extent.

There are two general approaches to preventing the spread of resistance: preventing malaria infections, and preventing the transmission of resistant parasites.

Preventing malaria infections developing has a substantial effect on the potential rate of development of resistance, by directly reducing the number of cases of malaria thus decreasing the need for anti-malarial therapy. Preventing the transmission of resistant parasites limits the risk of resistant malarial infections becoming endemic and can be controlled by a variety of non-medical methods including insecticide-treated bed nets, indoor residual spraying, environmental controls (such as swamp draining) and personal protective methods such as using mosquito repellent. Chemoprophylaxis is also important in the transmission of malaria infection and resistance in defined populations (for example travelers).

A hope for future of anti-malarial therapy is the development of an effective malaria vaccine. This could have enormous public health benefits, providing a cost-effective and easily applicable approach to preventing not only the onset of malaria but the transmission of gametocytes, thus reducing the risk of resistance developing. Anti-malarial therapy also could be diversified by combining a potentially effective vaccine with current[when?] chemotherapy, thereby reducing the chance of vaccine resistance developing.

Combination therapy edit

The problem of the development of malaria resistance must be weighed against the essential goal of anti-malarial care; that is to reduce morbidity and mortality. Thus a balance must be reached that attempts to achieve both goals while not compromising either too much by doing so. The most successful attempts so far have been in the administration of combination therapy. This can be defined as, 'the simultaneous use of two or more blood schizonticidal drugs with independent modes of action and different biochemical targets in the parasite'.[23] There is much evidence to support the use of combination therapies, some of which has been discussed previously, however several problems prevent the wide use in the areas where its use is most advisable. These include: problems identifying the most suitable drug for different epidemiological situations, the expense of combined therapy (it is over 10 times more expensive than traditional mono-therapy), how soon the programmes should be introduced and problems linked with policy implementation and issues of compliance.

The combinations of drugs currently[when?] prescribed can be divided into two categories: non-artemesinin-based combinations and artemesinin based combinations. It is also important to distinguish fixed-dose combination therapies (in which two or more drugs are co-formulated into a single tablet) from combinations achieved by taking two separate antimalarials.

Non-artemisinin based combinations edit

Components Description Dose
Sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) (Fansidar) This fixed-dose combination has been used for many years, causes few adverse effects, is cheap and effective in a single dose, thus decreasing problems associated with adherence and compliance. In technical terms Fansidar is not generally considered a true combination therapy since the components do not possess independent curative activity.[5][page needed] Fansidar should no longer be used alone for treatment of falciparum malaria. 25 mg/kg of sulfadoxine and 1.25 mg/kg of pyrimethamine.
SP plus chloroquine High levels of resistance to one or both components means this combination is effective in few locations and it is not recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO).[5][page needed] Chloroquine 25 mg/kg over three days with a single dose of SP as described above.
SP plus amodiaquine This combination has been shown to produce a faster rate of clinical recovery than SP and chloroquine, but is clearly inferior to artemisinin-based combinations (ACTs) for the treatment of malaria.[5][page needed] 10 mg/kg of Amodiaquine per day for three days with a single standard dose of SP.
SP plus mefloquine (Fansimef) This single dose pill offered obvious advantages of convenience over more complex regimes but it has not been recommended for use for many years owing to widespread resistance to the components.
Quinine plus tetracycline/doxycycline This combination retains a high cure rate in many areas. Problems with this regime include the relatively complicated drug regimen, where quinine must be taken every eight hours for seven days. Additionally, there are significant side effects with quinine ('cinchonism') and tetracyclines are contraindicated in children and pregnant women (these groups should use clindamycin instead). With the advent of artemisinin-combination therapies, quinine-based treatment is less popular than previously. Quinine 10 mg/kg doses every eight hours and tetracycline in 4 mg/kg doses every six hours for seven days.

Artemisinin-based combination therapies should be used in preference to amodiaquine plus sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine for the treatment of uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria.[5][page needed]

Artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) edit

Artemesinin has a very different mode of action than conventional anti-malarials (see information above), which makes it particularly useful in the treatment of resistant infections. However, to prevent the development of resistance to this drug it is only recommended in combination with another non-artemesinin based therapy. It produces a very rapid reduction in the parasite biomass with an associated reduction in clinical symptoms and is known to cause a reduction in the transmission of gametocytes thus decreasing the potential for the spread of resistant alleles. At present there is no known resistance to Artemesinin (though some resistant strains may be emerging)[24] and very few reported side-effects to drug usage, however this data is limited.

Components Description Dose
Artesunate and amodiaquine (Coarsucam or ASAQ) This combination has been tested and proved to be efficacious in many areas where amodiaquine retains some efficacy. A potential disadvantage is a suggested link with neutropenia. It's recommended by the WHO for uncomplicated falciparum malaria.[5][page needed] Dosage is as a fixed-dose combination (ASAQ) recommended as 4 mg/kg of Artesunate and 10 mg/kg of Amodiaquine per day for three days.
Artesunate and mefloquine (Artequin or ASMQ) This has been used as an efficacious first-line treatment regimen in areas of Thailand for many years. Mefloquine is known to cause vomiting in children and induces some neuropsychiatric and cardiotoxic effects. These adverse reactions seem to be reduced when the drug is combined with artesunate, it is suggested that this is due to a delayed onset of action of mefloquine. This is not considered a viable option to be introduced in Africa due to the long half-life of mefloquine, which potentially could exert a high selection pressure on parasites. It's recommended by the WHO for uncomplicated falciparum malaria.[5][page needed] The standard dose required is 4 mg/kg per day of Artesunate plus 25 mg/kg of Mefloquine as a split dose of 15 mg/kg on day two and 10 mg/kg on day three.
Artemether and lumefantrine (Coartem Riamet, Faverid, Amatem, Lonart or AL) This combination has been extensively tested in 16 clinical trials, proving effective in children under five and has been shown to be better tolerated than artesunate plus mefloquine combinations. There are no serious side effects documented but the drug is not recommended in pregnant or lactating women due to limited safety testing in these groups. This is the most viable option for widespread use and is available in fixed-dose formulas thus increasing compliance and adherence. It's recommended by the WHO for uncomplicated falciparum malaria.[5][page needed]
Artesunate and sulfadoxine/pyrimethamine (Ariplus or Amalar plus) This is a well tolerated combination but the overall level of efficacy still depends on the level of resistance to sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine thus limiting is usage. It is recommended by the WHO for uncomplicated falciparum malaria.[5][page needed] It is recommended in doses of 4 mg/kg of Artesunate per day for three days and a single dose of 25 mg/kg of SP.
Dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (Duo-Cotecxin, or Artekin) Has been studied mainly in China, Vietnam and other countries in SEAsia. The drug has been shown to be highly efficacious (greater than 90%). It's recommended by the WHO for uncomplicated falciparum malaria.[5][page needed]
Artesinin/piperaguine/primaquine (Fast Elimination of Malaria through Source Eradication (FEMSE)) This protocol involves three doses of Artequick, spaced a month apart. The first dose is accompanied by one of primaquine. An experimental program in the Comoros islands employed the protocol. At the outset, more than 90% of the inhabitants of some villages had malaria. On one island the number of cases fell by 95%. In 2012, on the second island, the number of cases fell by 97%.[25]
Pyronaridine and artesunate (Pyramax) Pyramax developed by Shin Poong Pharmaceutical and Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV). This is a first fixed-dose artemisinin-based combination therapy to be granted a positive scientific opinion for efficacy, safety and quality from European Medicines Agency (EMA) under Article 58 for the treatment of P. falciparum and P. vivax in adults and children over 20 kg based on five multi-centre phase III trials conducted in Africa and South-East Asia. Pyramax has been shown to be highly efficacious (greater than 97%) in both species and only ACT approved by stringent regulatory authority for treatment of both P. falciparum and P vivax by now.

Other combinations edit

Several other anti-malarial combinations have been used or are in development. For example, Chlorproguanil-dapsone and artesunate appeared efficacious in trials from the late 90s and 2000s, but the problem of haemolysis in patients with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency is likely to prevent widespread use.[26]

By type of malaria edit

Antimalarial drugs and combinations may also be sorted according to the type of malaria in which they are used.

Falciparum malaria edit

Artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) are the recommended antimalarial treatments for uncomplicated malaria caused by P. falciparum.[5][page needed] The choice of ACT in a country or region will be based on the level of resistance to the constituents in the combination.[5][page needed] For pregnant women, the recommended first-line treatment during the first trimester is quinine plus clindamycin to be given for seven days.[5][page needed] In second and third trimesters, it is recommended to give ACTs known to be effective in the country/region or artesunate plus clindamycin for seven days, or quinine plus clindamycin to be given for seven days.[5][page needed] Lactating women should receive standard antimalarial treatment (including ACTs) except for dapsone, primaquine and tetracyclines. In infants and young children, it is recommended to give ACTs for first-line treatment, with attention to accurate dosing and ensuring the administered dose is retained.[5][page needed]

In severe falciparum malaria, it is recommended that rapid clinical assessment and confirmation of the diagnosis is made, followed by administration of full doses of parenteral antimalarial treatment without delay with whichever effective antimalarial is first available.[5][page needed] For adults, intravenous (IV) or intramuscular (IM) artesunate is recommended.[5] Quinine is an acceptable alternative if parenteral artesunate is not available.[5][page needed] Parenteral antimalarials should be administered for a minimum of 24 h in the treatment of severe malaria, irrespective of the patient's ability to tolerate oral medication earlier.[5][page needed] Thereafter, it is recommended to complete treatment by giving a complete course of any of the following:[5][page needed]

  • an ACT
  • artesunate plus clindamycin or doxycycline;
  • quinine plus clindamycin or doxycycline.

Vivax malaria edit

Chloroquine remains the treatment of choice for vivax malaria,[5][page needed] except in Indonesia's Irian Jaya (Western New Guinea) region and the geographically contiguous Papua New Guinea, where chloroquine resistance is common (up to 20% resistance).

Malaria in poultry edit

No medications are approved in the United States for treatment of malaria in poultry.[27]

See also edit

  • Diospyros melanoxylon, tree with possible antiplasmodial properties
  • Malaria prophylaxis
  • Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) – a not-for-profit organization which is managing the largest–ever portfolio of over 50 antimalarial projects in collaboration with over 100 pharmaceutical, academic, and endemic-country partners in 38 countries.
  • Amazon Malaria Initiative – a regional USAID project in 11 countries in the Latin America and the Caribbean region.
  • RAVREDA – a regional network of national malaria control programs that conduct antimalarial drug efficacy surveillance and other activities to address malaria.
  • Project 523

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Ashley, Elizabeth A.; Phyo, Aung Pyae (25 May 2018). "Drugs in Development for Malaria". Drugs. 78 (9): 861–879. doi:10.1007/s40265-018-0911-9. PMC 6013505. PMID 29802605.
  2. ^ Mittra, Robert A.; Mieler, William F. (2013). "Drug Toxicity of the Posterior Segment". Retina. pp. 1532–1554. doi:10.1016/B978-1-4557-0737-9.00089-8. ISBN 978-1-4557-0737-9.
  3. ^ "Updating the WHO G6PD classification of variants and the International Classification of Diseases" (PDF). www.who.int. 2019. Retrieved 2020-03-24.
  4. ^ Prevention, CDC-Centers for Disease Control and (2023-06-28). "CDC - Malaria - Diagnosis & Treatment (United States) - Treatment (U.S.) - Guidelines for Clinicians (Part 1)". www.cdc.gov. Retrieved 2023-09-12.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w World Health Organization (2015). Guidelines for the treatment of malaria (Third ed.). World Health Organization (WHO). hdl:10665/162441. ISBN 978-92-4-154912-7.
  6. ^ Kuecken, Maria; Thuilliez, Josselin; Valfort, Marie-Anne (2020). "Disease and Human Capital Accumulation: Evidence from the Roll Back Malaria Partnership in Africa". The Economic Journal. 131 (637): 2171–2202. doi:10.1093/ej/ueaa134.
  7. ^ Sparkes, Roland. Article, www.belmonthistory.org.uk [1] 2022-08-06 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 2010-01-05[full citation needed]
  8. ^ "Fact check: Hydroxychloroquine is not the same as quinine and can't be made at home". Reuters. 31 May 2020.
  9. ^ "New preparation of hydroxychloroquine".
  10. ^ "Preparation method of hydroxychloroquine sulfate".
  11. ^ a b Scholar, Eric (2007-01-01), Enna, S. J.; Bylund, David B. (eds.), "Amodiaquine", xPharm: The Comprehensive Pharmacology Reference, New York: Elsevier, pp. 1–4, ISBN 978-0-08-055232-3, retrieved 2023-08-04
  12. ^ a b "Pyrimethamine". go.drugbank.com. Retrieved 2023-08-04.
  13. ^ a b "Proguanil". go.drugbank.com. Retrieved 2023-08-04.
  14. ^ Frans Timmerhuis (2013-02-04). Handboek wereldreiziger. Elmar B.V., Uitgeverij. ISBN 978-90-389-2055-9.
  15. ^ Markus, MB (2018). "Biological Concepts in Recurrent Plasmodium vivax Malaria". Parasitology. 145 (13): 1765–1771. doi:10.1017/S003118201800032X. PMID 29564998. S2CID 206250162.
  16. ^ Dicko, Alassane; Roh, Michelle E; Diawara, Halimatou; Mahamar, Almahamoudou; Soumare, Harouna M; Lanke, Kjerstin; Bradley, John; Sanogo, Koualy; Kone, Daouda T; Diarra, Kalifa; Keita, Sekouba; Issiaka, Djibrilla; Traore, Sekou F; McCulloch, Charles; Stone, Will J R; Hwang, Jimee; Müller, Olaf; Brown, Joelle M; Srinivasan, Vinay; Drakeley, Chris; Gosling, Roly; Chen, Ingrid; Bousema, Teun (June 2018). "Efficacy and safety of primaquine and methylene blue for prevention of Plasmodium falciparum transmission in Mali: a phase 2, single-blind, randomised controlled trial". The Lancet Infectious Diseases. 18 (6): 627–639. doi:10.1016/S1473-3099(18)30044-6. PMC 5968371. PMID 29422384.
  17. ^ "Rectal artemisinins rapidly eliminate malarial parasites". EurekAlert!. 2008-03-27. from the original on 3 April 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-28.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 December 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-19.
  19. ^ (PDF). November 13, 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-11-13.
  20. ^ van Vugt M, Brockman A, Gemperli B, Luxemburger C, Gathmann I, Royce C, Slight T, Looareesuwan S, White NJ, Nosten F (January 1998). "Randomized comparison of artemether-benflumetol and artesunate-mefloquine in treatment of multidrug-resistant falciparum malaria". Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. 42 (1): 135–9. doi:10.1128/AAC.42.1.135. PMC 105468. PMID 9449273.
  21. ^ Velebny, Samuel; Hrckova, Gabriela (Dec 13, 2012). Pharmacological Potential of Selected Natural Compounds in the Control of Parasitic Diseases. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 3. ISBN 9783709113264.
  22. ^ White NJ (April 2004). "Antimalarial drug resistance". J. Clin. Invest. 113 (8): 1084–92. doi:10.1172/JCI21682. PMC 385418. PMID 15085184.
  23. ^ Antony HA, Parija SC (2016). "Antimalarial drug resistance: An overview". Tropical Parasitology. 6 (1): 30–41. doi:10.4103/2229-5070.175081. PMC 4778180. PMID 26998432.
  24. ^ Lim P; Alker AP; Khim N; et al. (2009). "Pfmdr1 copy number and arteminisin derivatives combination therapy failure in falciparum malaria in Cambodia". Malar. J. 8: 11. doi:10.1186/1475-2875-8-11. PMC 2627910. PMID 19138391.
  25. ^ "Malaria eradication: Cure all?". The Economist. 2014-01-25. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
  26. ^ Premji Z, Umeh RE, Owusu-Agyei S, et al. (2009). "Chlorproguanil-dapsone-artesunate versus artemether-lumefantrine: a randomized, double-blind phase III trial in African children and adolescents with uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria". PLOS ONE. 4 (8): e6682. Bibcode:2009PLoSO...4.6682P. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0006682. PMC 2724683. PMID 19690618.
  27. ^ Wettere, Arnaud J. Van (2020-02-25). "Plasmodium Infection in Poultry - Poultry". Merck Veterinary Manual. Retrieved 2022-07-21.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) – for information on the largest–ever portfolio of over 50 antimalarial projects, working in collaboration with over 100 pharmaceutical, academic, and endemic-country partners in 38 countries.
  • The Worldwide Antimalarial Resistance Network (WWARN) is a global collaboration generating quality-assured, timely information to track the emergence and spread of antimalarial resistance — critical information for ensuring that anyone infected with malaria receives safe and effective treatment.
  • 2007 guidelines are available from the UK Health Protection Agency 2013-09-28 at the Wayback Machine website as a PDF file and includes detailed country-specific information for UK travelers.
  • The World Health Organization provides country-specific advice on malaria prevention. HPA and WHO advice are broadly in line with each other (although there are some differences).
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website hosts constantly updated country-specific information on malaria. The advice on this website is less detailed, is very cautious and may not be appropriate for all areas within a given country. This is the preferred site for travelers from the US.

antimalarial, medication, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, articl. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Antimalarial medication news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Antimalarial medications or simply antimalarials are a type of antiparasitic chemical agent often naturally derived that can be used to treat or to prevent malaria in the latter case most often aiming at two susceptible target groups young children and pregnant women 1 As of 2018 modern treatments including for severe malaria continued to depend on therapies deriving historically from quinine and artesunate both parenteral injectable drugs expanding from there into the many classes of available modern drugs 1 Incidence and distribution of the disease malaria burden is expected to remain high globally for many years to come moreover known antimalarial drugs have repeatedly been observed to elicit resistance in the malaria parasite including for combination therapies featuring artemisinin a drug of last resort where resistance has now been observed in Southeast Asia 1 As such the needs for new antimalarial agents and new strategies of treatment e g new combination therapies remain important priorities in tropical medicine 1 As well despite very positive outcomes from many modern treatments serious side effects can impact some individuals taking standard doses e g retinopathy with chloroquine acute haemolytic anaemia with tafenoquine 2 3 1 Specifically antimalarial drugs may be used to treat malaria in three categories of individuals i those with suspected or confirmed infection ii those visiting a malaria endemic regions who have no immunity to prevent infection via malaria prophylaxis and iii or in broader groups of individuals in routine but intermittent preventative treatment in regions where malaria is endemic via intermittent preventive therapy not verified in body Practice in treating cases of malaria is most often based on the concept of combination therapy verification needed e g using agents such as artemether and lumefantrine against chloroquine resistant Plasmodium falciparum infection verification needed 4 since this offers advantages including reduced risk of treatment failure reduced risk of developed resistance as well as the possibility of reduced side effects not verified in body Prompt parasitological confirmation by microscopy or alternatively by rapid diagnostic tests is recommended in all patients suspected of malaria before treatment is started 5 page needed Treatment solely on the basis of clinical suspicion is considered when a parasitological diagnosis is not possible 5 page needed Anti malaria aid campaigns have a globally positive impact for health outcomes and beyond 6 Contents 1 Medications 1 1 Quinine and related agents 1 2 Chloroquine 1 3 Hydroxychloroquine 1 4 Amodiaquine 1 5 Pyrimethamine 1 6 Proguanil 1 7 Sulfonamides 1 8 Mefloquine 1 9 Atovaquone 1 10 Primaquine 1 11 Artemisinin and derivatives 1 12 Halofantrine 1 13 Lumefantrine 1 14 Doxycycline 1 15 Clindamycin 2 Resistance 2 1 Spread of resistance 2 2 Prevention 3 Combination therapy 3 1 Non artemisinin based combinations 3 2 Artemisinin based combination therapies ACTs 3 3 Other combinations 4 By type of malaria 4 1 Falciparum malaria 4 2 Vivax malaria 4 3 Malaria in poultry 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksMedications editIt is practical to consider antimalarials by chemical structure since this is associated with important properties of each drug such as mechanism of action citation needed Quinine and related agents edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Quinine has a long history stretching from Peru and the discovery of the cinchona tree and the potential uses of its bark to the current day when and a collection of derivatives that are still frequently used in the prevention and treatment of malaria Quinine is an alkaloid that acts as a blood schizonticidal and weak gametocide against Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium malariae As an alkaloid it is accumulated in the food vacuoles of Plasmodium species especially Plasmodium falciparum It acts by inhibiting the hemozoin biocrystallization thus facilitating an aggregation of cytotoxic heme Quinine is less effective and more toxic as a blood schizonticidal agent than chloroquine however it is still very effective and widely used in the treatment of acute cases of severe P falciparum It is especially useful in areas where there is known to be a high level of resistance to chloroquine mefloquine and sulfa drug combinations with pyrimethamine Quinine is also used in post exposure treatment of individuals returning from an area where malaria is endemic The treatment regimen of quinine is complex and is determined largely by the parasite s level of resistance and the reason for drug therapy i e acute treatment or prophylaxis The World Health Organization recommendation for quinine is 20 mg kg first times and 10 mg kg every eight hours for five days where parasites are sensitive to quinine combined with doxycycline tetracycline or clindamycin Doses can be given by oral intravenous or intramuscular routes The suggested course of action is determined by the need for therapy and the available resources i e sterilised needles for IV or IM injections Use of quinine is characterised by a frequently experienced syndrome called cinchonism Tinnitus a hearing impairment rashes vertigo nausea vomiting and abdominal pain are the most common symptoms Neurological effects are experienced in some cases due to the drug s neurotoxic properties These actions are mediated through the interactions of quinine causing a decrease in the excitability of the motor neuron end plates This often results in functional impairment of the eighth cranial nerve resulting in confusion delirium and coma Quinine can cause hypoglycaemia through its action of stimulating insulin secretion this occurs in therapeutic doses and therefore it is advised that glucose levels are monitored in all patients every 4 6 hours This effect can be exaggerated in pregnancy and therefore additional care in administering and monitoring the dosage is essential Repeated or over dosage can result in kidney failure and death through depression of the respiratory system Quinimax and quinidine are the two most commonly used alkaloids related to quinine in the treatment or prevention of malaria Quinimax is a combination of four alkaloids quinine quinidine cinchonine and cinchonidine This combination has been shown in several studies to be more effective than quinine supposedly due to a synergistic action among the four cinchona derivatives Quinidine is a direct derivative of quinine It is a distereoisomer thus having similar anti malarial properties to the parent compound Quinidine is recommended only for the treatment of severe cases of malaria Warburg s tincture was a febrifuge developed by Carl Warburg in 1834 which included quinine as a key ingredient In the 19th century it was a well known anti malarial drug Although originally sold as a secret medicine Warburg s tincture was highly regarded by many eminent medical professionals who considered it as being superior to quinine e g Surgeon General W C Maclean Professor of Military Medicine at British Army Medical School Netley Warburg s tincture appeared in Martindale The complete drug reference from 1883 until about 1920 The formula was published in The Lancet 1875 7 Chloroquine edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Chloroquine was until recently the most widely used anti malarial It was the original prototype from which most methods of treatment are derived It is also the least expensive best tested and safest of all available drugs The emergence of drug resistant parasitic strains is rapidly decreasing its effectiveness however it is still the first line drug of choice in most sub Saharan African countries It is now suggested that it is used in combination with other antimalarial drugs to extend its effective usage Popular drugs based on chloroquine phosphate also called nivaquine are Chloroquine FNA Resochin and Dawaquin Chloroquine is a 4 aminoquinolone compound with a complicated and still unclear mechanism of action It is believed to reach high concentrations in the vacuoles of the parasite which due to its alkaline nature raises the internal pH It controls the conversion of toxic heme to hemozoin by inhibiting the biocrystallization of hemozoin thus poisoning the parasite through excess levels of toxicity Other potential mechanisms through which it may act include interfering with the biosynthesis of parasitic nucleic acids and the formation of a chloroquine haem or chloroquine DNA complex The most significant level of activity found is against all forms of the schizonts with the obvious exception of chloroquine resistant P falciparum and P vivax strains and the gametocytes of P vivax P malariae P ovale as well as the immature gametocytes of P falciparum Chloroquine also has a significant anti pyretic and anti inflammatory effect when used to treat P vivax infections and thus it may still remain useful even when resistance is more widespread According to a report on the Science and Development Network website s sub Saharan Africa section there is very little drug resistance among children infected with malaria on the island of Madagascar but what drug resistance there is exists against chloroquinine Children and adults should receive 25 mg of chloroquine per kg given over three days A pharmacokinetically superior regime recommended by the WHO involves giving an initial dose of 10 mg kg followed 6 8 hours later by 5 mg kg then 5 mg kg on the following two days For chemoprophylaxis 5 mg kg week single dose or 10 mg kg week divided into six daily doses is advised Chloroquine is only recommended as a prophylactic drug in regions only affected by P vivax and sensitive P falciparum strains Chloroquine has been used in the treatment of malaria for many years and no abortifacient or teratogenic effects have been reported during this time therefore it is considered very safe to use during pregnancy However itching can occur at intolerable level and Chloroquinine can be a provocation factor of psoriasis Hydroxychloroquine edit Hydroxychloroquine was derived in the 1950s by adding a hydroxy group to existing Chloroquine making it more tolerable than Chloroquine by itself 8 9 10 Amodiaquine edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Amodiaquine is a 4 aminoquinolone anti malarial drug similar in structure and mechanism of action to chloroquine Amodiaquine has tended to be administered in areas of chloroquine resistance while some patients prefer its tendency to cause less itching than chloroquine Amodiaquine is now available in a combined formulation with artesunate ASAQ and is among the artemisinin combination therapies recommended by the World Health Organization Combination with sulfadoxine pyrimethamine is not recommended 5 The drug should be given in doses between 25 mg kg and 35 mg kg over three days in a similar method to that used in chloroquine administration Adverse reactions are generally similar in severity and type to that seen in chloroquine treatment 11 In addition bradycardia itching nausea vomiting and some abdominal pain have been recorded Some blood and hepatic disorders have also been seen in a small number of patients 11 Pyrimethamine edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Pyrimethamine is used in the treatment of uncomplicated malaria It is particularly useful in cases of chloroquine resistant P falciparum strains when combined with sulfadoxine 12 It acts by inhibiting dihydrofolate reductase in the parasite thus preventing the biosynthesis of purines and pyrimidines thereby halting the processes of DNA replication cell division and reproduction It acts primarily on the schizonts during the erythrocytic phase and nowadays is only used in concert with a sulfonamide 12 Proguanil edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Proguanil chloroguanide is a biguanide a synthetic derivative of pyrimidine It was developed in 1945 by a British Antimalarial research group It has many mechanisms of action but primarily is mediated through conversion to the active metabolite cycloguanil This inhibits the malarial dihydrofolate reductase enzyme Its most prominent effect is on the primary tissue stages of P falciparum P vivax and P ovale It has no known effect against hypnozoites therefore is not used in the prevention of relapse It has a weak blood schizonticidal activity and is not recommended for therapy of acute infection However it is useful in prophylaxis when combined with atovaquone or chloroquine in areas where there is no chloroquine resistance 3 mg kg is the advised dosage per day hence approximate adult dosage is 200 mg 13 The pharmacokinetic profile of the drugs indicates that a half dose twice daily maintains the plasma levels with a greater level of consistency thus giving a greater level of protection The proguanil chloroquine combination does not provide effective protection against resistant strains of P falciparum There are very few side effects to proguanil with slight hair loss and mouth ulcers being occasionally reported following prophylactic use 13 Proguanil hydrochloride is marketed as Paludrine by AstraZeneca Sulfonamides edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sulfadoxine and sulfamethoxypyridazine are specific inhibitors of the enzyme dihydropteroate synthetase in the tetrahydrofolate synthesis pathway of malaria parasites They are structural analogs of p aminobenzoic acid PABA and compete with PABA to block its conversion to dihydrofolic acid Sulfonamides act on the schizont stages of the erythrocytic asexual cycle When administered alone sulfonamides are not efficacious in treating malaria but co administration with the antifolate pyrimethamine most commonly as fixed dose sulfadoxine pyrimethamine Fansidar produces synergistic effects sufficient to cure sensitive strains of malaria Sulfonamides are not recommended for chemoprophylaxis because of rare but severe skin reactions experienced However it is used frequently for clinical episodes of the disease Mefloquine edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mefloquine was developed during the Vietnam War and is chemically related to quinine It was developed to protect American troops against multi drug resistant P falciparum It is a very potent blood schizonticide with a long half life It is thought to act by forming toxic heme complexes that damage parasitic food vacuoles Mefloquine is effective in prophylaxis and for acute therapy It is now used solely for the prevention of resistant strains of P falciparum usually combined with Artesunate despite being effective against P vivax P ovale and P marlariae Chloroquine proguanil or sulfa drug pyrimethamine combinations should be used in all other plasmodia infections The major commercial manufacturer of mefloquine based malaria treatment is Roche Pharmaceuticals which markets the drug under the trade name Lariam Lariam is fairly expensive at around three per tablet pricing of the year 2000 A dose of 15 25 mg kg is recommended depending on the prevalence of mefloquine resistance The increased dosage is associated with a much greater level of intolerance most noticeably in young children with the drug inducing vomiting and esophagitis It was not recommended for use during the first trimester although considered safe during the second and third trimesters nevertheless in October 2011 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC changed its recommendation and approved use of Mefloquine for both prophylaxis and treatment of malaria in all trimesters after the Food and Drug Administration FDA changed its categorization from C to B Mefloquine frequently produces side effects including nausea vomiting diarrhea abdominal pain and dizziness Several associations with neurological events have been made namely affective and anxiety disorders hallucinations sleep disturbances psychosis toxic encephalopathy convulsions and delirium Cardiovascular effects have been recorded with bradycardia and sinus arrhythmia being consistently recorded in 68 of patients treated with mefloquine in one hospital based study Mefloquine can only be taken for a period up to six months due to side effects After this other drugs such as those based on paludrine nivaquine again need to be taken 14 medical citation needed Atovaquone edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Atovaquone is available in combination with proguanil under the name Malarone albeit at a price higher than Lariam It is commonly used in prophylaxis by travelers and used to treat falciparum malaria in developed countries A liquid oral suspension of Atovaquone is available under the name Mepron Primaquine edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Primaquine is a highly active 8 aminoquinolone that is effective against P falcipraum gametocytes but also acts on merozoites in the bloodstream and on hypnozoites the dormant hepatic forms of P vivax and P ovale 15 It is the only known drug to cure both relapsing malaria infections and acute cases The mechanism of action is not fully understood but it is thought to block oxidative metabolism in Plasmodia It can also be combined with methylene blue 16 For the prevention of relapse in P vivax and P ovale 0 15 mg kg should be given for 14 days As a gametocytocidal drug in P falciparum infections a single dose of 0 75 mg kg repeated seven days later is sufficient This treatment method is only used in conjunction with another effective blood schizonticidal drug There are few significant side effects although it has been shown that primaquine may cause anorexia nausea vomiting cramps chest weakness anaemia some suppression of myeloid activity and abdominal pains In cases of over dosage granulocytopenia may occur citation needed Artemisinin and derivatives edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Artemisinin is a Chinese herb qinghaosu that has been used in the treatment of fevers for over 1 000 years 17 It is derived from the plant Artemisia annua with the first documentation as a successful therapeutic agent in the treatment of malaria is in 340 AD by Ge Hong in his book Zhou Hou Bei Ji Fang A Handbook of Prescriptions for Emergencies 18 Ge Hong extracted the artemesinin using a simple macerate and this method is still in use today 19 The active compound was first isolated in 1971 and named artemisinin Artemisinin has a very rapid action and the vast majority of acute patients treated show significant improvement within 1 3 days of receiving treatment citation needed It has demonstrated the fastest clearance of all anti malarials currently when used and acts primarily on the trophozoite phase thus preventing progression of the disease citation needed Semi synthetic artemisinin derivatives e g artesunate artemether are easier to use than the parent compound and are converted rapidly once in the body to the active compound dihydroartemesinin citation needed On the first day of treatment 20 mg kg is often given and the dose then reduced to 10 mg kg per day for the six following days citation needed Few side effects are associated with artemesinin use citation needed However headaches nausea vomiting abnormal bleeding dark urine itching and some drug fever have been reported by a small number of patients citation needed Some cardiac changes were reported during a clinical trial notably non specific ST changes and a first degree atrioventricular block these disappeared when the patients recovered from the malarial fever citation needed Artemether is a methyl ether derivative of dihydroartemesinin It is similar to artemesinin in mode of action but demonstrates a reduced ability as a hypnozoiticidal compound instead acting more significantly to decrease gametocyte carriage Similar restrictions are in place as with artemesinin to prevent the development of resistance therefore it is only used in combination therapy for severe acute cases of drug resistant P falciparum It should be administered in a 7 day course with 4 mg kg given per day for three days followed by 1 6 mg kg for three days Side effects of the drug are few but include potential neurotoxicity developing if high doses are given citation needed Artesunate is a hemisuccinate derivative of the active metabolite dihydroartemisin Currently when it is the most frequently used of all the artemesinin type drugs Its only effect is mediated through a reduction in the gametocyte transmission It is used in combination therapy and is effective in cases of uncomplicated P falciparum The dosage recommended by the WHO is a five or seven day course depending on the predicted adherence level of 4 mg kg for three days usually given in combination with mefloquine followed by 2 mg kg for the remaining two or four days In large studies carried out on over 10 000 patients in Thailand no adverse effects have been shown citation needed Dihydroartemisinin is the active metabolite to which artemesinin is reduced It is the most effective artemesinin compound and the least stable It has a strong blood schizonticidal action and reduces gametocyte transmission It is used for therapeutic treatment of cases of resistant and uncomplicated P falciparum 4 mg kg doses are recommended on the first day of therapy followed by 2 mg kg for six days As with artesunate no side effects to treatment have thus far been recorded citation needed Arteether is an ethyl ether derivative of dihydroartemisinin It is used in combination therapy for cases of uncomplicated resistant P falciparum The recommended dosage is 150 mg kg per day for three days given by IM injections With the exception of a small number of cases demonstrating neurotoxicity following parenteral administration no side effects have been recorded citation needed Halofantrine edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Halofantrine is a relatively new drug developed by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in the 1960s It is a phenanthrene methanol chemically related to Quinine and acts acting as a blood schizonticide effective against all Plasmodium parasites Its mechanism of action is similar to other anti malarials Cytotoxic complexes are formed with ferritoporphyrin XI that cause plasmodial membrane damage Despite being effective against drug resistant parasites halofantrine is not commonly used in the treatment prophylactic or therapeutic of malaria due to its high cost It has very variable bioavailability and has been shown to have potentially high levels of cardiotoxicity It is still a useful drug and can be used in patients that are known to be free of heart disease and that have severe and resistant forms of acute malaria citation needed A popular drug based on halofantrine is Halfan The level of governmental control and the prescription only basis on which it can be used contributes to the cost thus halofantrine is not frequently used A dose of 8 mg kg of halofantrine is advised to be given in three doses at six hour intervals for the duration of the clinical episode It is not recommended for children under 10 kg despite data supporting the use and demonstrating that it is well tolerated The most frequently experienced side effects include nausea abdominal pain diarrhea and itch Severe ventricular dysrhythmias occasionally causing death are seen when high doses are administered This is due to prolongation of the QTc interval Halofantrine is not recommended for use in pregnancy and lactation in small children or in patients that have taken mefloquine previously Lumefantrine edit Lumefantrine is a relative of halofantrine that is used in some combination antimalarial regimens 20 Doxycycline edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Probably one of the more prevalent antimalarial drugs prescribed due to its relative effectiveness and cheapness doxycycline is a tetracycline compound derived from oxytetracycline The tetracyclines were one of the earliest groups of antibiotics to be developed and are still used widely in many types of infection It is a bacteriostatic agent that acts to inhibit the process of protein synthesis by binding to the 30S ribosomal subunit thus preventing the 50s and 30s units from bonding Doxycycline is used primarily for chemoprophylaxis in areas where chloroquine resistance exists It can also be used in combination with quinine to treat resistant cases of P falciparum but has a very slow action in acute malaria and should not be used as monotherapy When treating acute cases and given in combination with quinine 100 mg of doxycycline should be given per day for seven days In prophylactic therapy 100 mg adult dose of doxycycline should be given every day during exposure to malaria The most commonly experienced side effects are permanent enamel hypoplasia although this is only relevant during the period of tooth development during the first decade of life transient depression of bone growth gastrointestinal disturbances and some increased levels of photosensitivity Due to its effect of bone and tooth growth it is not used in children under 8 pregnant or lactating women and those with a known hepatic dysfunction Tetracycline is only used in combination for the treatment of acute cases of P falciparum infections This is due to its slow onset Unlike doxycycline it is not used in chemoprophylaxis For tetracycline 250 mg is the recommended adult dosage it should not be used in children for five or seven days depending on the level of adherence and compliance expected Oesophageal ulceration gastrointestinal upset and interferences with the process of ossification and depression of bone growth are known to occur The majority of side effects associated with doxycycline are also experienced Clindamycin edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Clindamycin is a derivative of lincomycin with a slow action against blood schizonticides It is only used in combination with quinine in the treatment of acute cases of resistant P falciparum infections and not as a prophylactic Being more toxic than the other antibiotic alternatives it is used only in cases where the Tetracyclines are contraindicated for example in children Clindamycin should be given in conjunction with quinine as a 300 mg dose in adults four times a day for five days The only side effects recorded in patients taking clindamycin are nausea vomiting and abdominal pains and cramps However these can be alleviated by consuming large quantities of water and food when taking the drug Pseudomembranous colitis caused by Clostridium difficile has also developed in some patients this condition may be fatal in a small number of cases Resistance editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Anti malarial drug resistance has been defined as the ability of a parasite to survive and or multiply despite the administration and absorption of a drug given in doses equal to or higher than those usually recommended but within tolerance of the subject The drug in question must gain access to the parasite or the infected red blood cell for the duration of the time necessary for its normal action 21 Resistance to antimalarial drugs is common 22 In most instances this refers to parasites that remain following on from an observed treatment thus it excludes all cases where anti malarial prophylaxis has failed citation needed In order for a case to be defined as resistant the patient in question must have received a known and observed anti malarial therapy while the blood drug and metabolite concentrations are monitored concurrently techniques used to demonstrate this include in vivo in vitro and animal model testing and more recently developed molecular techniques citation needed Drug resistant parasites are often used to explain malaria treatment failure However they are two potentially very different clinical scenarios The failure to clear parasitemia and recover from an acute clinical episode when a suitable treatment has been given is anti malarial resistance in its true form Drug resistance may lead to treatment failure but treatment failure is not necessarily caused by drug resistance despite assisting with its development A multitude of factors can be involved in the processes including problems with non compliance and adherence poor drug quality interactions with other pharmaceuticals poor absorption misdiagnosis and incorrect doses being given The majority of these factors also contribute to the development of drug resistance The generation of resistance can be complicated and varies between Plasmodium species It is generally accepted to be initiated primarily through a spontaneous mutation that provides some evolutionary benefit thus giving the anti malarial used a reduced level of sensitivity This can be caused by a single point mutation or multiple mutations In most instances a mutation will be fatal for the parasite or the drug pressure will remove parasites that remain susceptible however some resistant parasites will survive Resistance can become firmly established within a parasite population existing for long periods of time The first type of resistance to be acknowledged was to chloroquine in Thailand in 1957 The biological mechanism behind this resistance was subsequently discovered to be related to the development of an efflux mechanism that expels chloroquine from the parasite before the level required to effectively inhibit the process of haem polymerization that is necessary to prevent buildup of the toxic byproducts formed by haemoglobin digestion This theory has been supported by evidence showing that resistance can be effectively reversed on the addition of substances which halt the efflux The resistance of other quinolone anti malarials such as amodiaquine mefloquine halofantrine and quinine are thought to have occurred by similar mechanisms Plasmodium have developed resistance against antifolate combination drugs the most commonly used being sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine Two gene mutations are thought to be responsible allowing synergistic blockages of two enzymes involved in folate synthesis Regional variations of specific mutations give differing levels of resistance Atovaquone is recommended to be used only in combination with another anti malarial compound as the selection of resistant parasites occurs very quickly when used in mono therapy Resistance is thought to originate from a single point mutation in the gene coding for cytochrome b Spread of resistance edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message There is no single factor that confers the greatest degree of influence on the spread of drug resistance but a number of plausible causes associated with an increase have been acknowledged These include aspects of economics human behaviour pharmacokinetics and the biology of vectors and parasites The most influential causes are examined below The biological influences are based on the parasites ability to survive the presence of an anti malarial thus enabling the persistence of resistance and the potential for further transmission despite treatment In normal circumstances any parasites that persist after treatment are destroyed by the host s immune system therefore any factors that act to reduce the elimination of parasites could facilitate the development of resistance This attempts to explain the poorer response associated with immunocompromised individuals pregnant women and young children There has been evidence to suggest that certain parasite vector combinations can alternatively enhance or inhibit the transmission of resistant parasites causing pocket like areas of resistance The use of anti malarials developed from similar basic chemical compounds can increase the rate of resistance development for example cross resistance to chloroquine and amodiaquine two 4 aminoquinolones and mefloquine conferring resistance to quinine and halofantrine This phenomenon may reduce the usefulness of newly developed therapies prior to large scale usage The resistance to anti malarials may be increased by a process found in some species of Plasmodium where a degree of phenotypic plasticity was exhibited allowing the rapid development of resistance to a new drug even if the drug has not been previously experienced The pharmacokinetics of the chosen anti malarial are key the decision of choosing a long half life over a drug that is metabolised quickly is complex and still remains unclear Drugs with shorter half life s require more frequent administration to maintain the correct plasma concentrations therefore potentially presenting more problems if levels of adherence and compliance are unreliable but longer lasting drugs can increase the development of resistance due to prolonged periods of low drug concentration The pharmacokinetics of anti malarials is important when using combination therapy Mismatched drug combinations for example having an unprotected period where one drug dominates can seriously increase the likelihood of selection for resistant parasites Ecologically there is a linkage between the level of transmission and the development of resistance however at present this still remains unclear The treatment regime prescribed can have a substantial influence on the development of resistance This can involve the drug intake combination and interactions as well as the drug s pharmacokinetic and dynamic properties Prevention edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The prevention of anti malarial drug resistance is of enormous public health importance It can be assumed that no therapy currently when under development or to be developed in the foreseeable future will be totally protective against malaria In accordance with this there is the possibility of resistance developing to any given therapy that is developed This is a serious concern as the rate at which new drugs are produced by no means matches the rate of the development of resistance In addition the most newly developed therapeutics tend to be the most expensive and are required in the largest quantities by some of the poorest areas of the world Therefore it is apparent that the degree to which malaria can be controlled depends on the careful use of the existing drugs to limit insofar as it is possible any further development of resistance Provisions essential to this process include the delivery of fast primary care where staff are well trained and supported with the necessary supplies for efficient treatment This in itself is inadequate in large areas where malaria is endemic thus presenting an initial problem One method proposed that aims to avoid the fundamental lack in certain countries health care infrastructure is the privatisation of some areas thus enabling drugs to be purchased on the open market from sources that are not officially related to the health care industry Although this is now gaining some support there are many problems related to limited access and improper drug use which could potentially increase the rate of resistance development to an even greater extent There are two general approaches to preventing the spread of resistance preventing malaria infections and preventing the transmission of resistant parasites Preventing malaria infections developing has a substantial effect on the potential rate of development of resistance by directly reducing the number of cases of malaria thus decreasing the need for anti malarial therapy Preventing the transmission of resistant parasites limits the risk of resistant malarial infections becoming endemic and can be controlled by a variety of non medical methods including insecticide treated bed nets indoor residual spraying environmental controls such as swamp draining and personal protective methods such as using mosquito repellent Chemoprophylaxis is also important in the transmission of malaria infection and resistance in defined populations for example travelers A hope for future of anti malarial therapy is the development of an effective malaria vaccine This could have enormous public health benefits providing a cost effective and easily applicable approach to preventing not only the onset of malaria but the transmission of gametocytes thus reducing the risk of resistance developing Anti malarial therapy also could be diversified by combining a potentially effective vaccine with current when chemotherapy thereby reducing the chance of vaccine resistance developing Combination therapy editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The problem of the development of malaria resistance must be weighed against the essential goal of anti malarial care that is to reduce morbidity and mortality Thus a balance must be reached that attempts to achieve both goals while not compromising either too much by doing so The most successful attempts so far have been in the administration of combination therapy This can be defined as the simultaneous use of two or more blood schizonticidal drugs with independent modes of action and different biochemical targets in the parasite 23 There is much evidence to support the use of combination therapies some of which has been discussed previously however several problems prevent the wide use in the areas where its use is most advisable These include problems identifying the most suitable drug for different epidemiological situations the expense of combined therapy it is over 10 times more expensive than traditional mono therapy how soon the programmes should be introduced and problems linked with policy implementation and issues of compliance The combinations of drugs currently when prescribed can be divided into two categories non artemesinin based combinations and artemesinin based combinations It is also important to distinguish fixed dose combination therapies in which two or more drugs are co formulated into a single tablet from combinations achieved by taking two separate antimalarials Non artemisinin based combinations edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Components Description DoseSulfadoxine pyrimethamine SP Fansidar This fixed dose combination has been used for many years causes few adverse effects is cheap and effective in a single dose thus decreasing problems associated with adherence and compliance In technical terms Fansidar is not generally considered a true combination therapy since the components do not possess independent curative activity 5 page needed Fansidar should no longer be used alone for treatment of falciparum malaria 25 mg kg of sulfadoxine and 1 25 mg kg of pyrimethamine SP plus chloroquine High levels of resistance to one or both components means this combination is effective in few locations and it is not recommended by the World Health Organization WHO 5 page needed Chloroquine 25 mg kg over three days with a single dose of SP as described above SP plus amodiaquine This combination has been shown to produce a faster rate of clinical recovery than SP and chloroquine but is clearly inferior to artemisinin based combinations ACTs for the treatment of malaria 5 page needed 10 mg kg of Amodiaquine per day for three days with a single standard dose of SP SP plus mefloquine Fansimef This single dose pill offered obvious advantages of convenience over more complex regimes but it has not been recommended for use for many years owing to widespread resistance to the components Quinine plus tetracycline doxycycline This combination retains a high cure rate in many areas Problems with this regime include the relatively complicated drug regimen where quinine must be taken every eight hours for seven days Additionally there are significant side effects with quinine cinchonism and tetracyclines are contraindicated in children and pregnant women these groups should use clindamycin instead With the advent of artemisinin combination therapies quinine based treatment is less popular than previously Quinine 10 mg kg doses every eight hours and tetracycline in 4 mg kg doses every six hours for seven days Artemisinin based combination therapies should be used in preference to amodiaquine plus sulfadoxine pyrimethamine for the treatment of uncomplicated P falciparum malaria 5 page needed Artemisinin based combination therapies ACTs edit Artemesinin has a very different mode of action than conventional anti malarials see information above which makes it particularly useful in the treatment of resistant infections However to prevent the development of resistance to this drug it is only recommended in combination with another non artemesinin based therapy It produces a very rapid reduction in the parasite biomass with an associated reduction in clinical symptoms and is known to cause a reduction in the transmission of gametocytes thus decreasing the potential for the spread of resistant alleles At present there is no known resistance to Artemesinin though some resistant strains may be emerging 24 and very few reported side effects to drug usage however this data is limited Components Description DoseArtesunate and amodiaquine Coarsucam or ASAQ This combination has been tested and proved to be efficacious in many areas where amodiaquine retains some efficacy A potential disadvantage is a suggested link with neutropenia It s recommended by the WHO for uncomplicated falciparum malaria 5 page needed Dosage is as a fixed dose combination ASAQ recommended as 4 mg kg of Artesunate and 10 mg kg of Amodiaquine per day for three days Artesunate and mefloquine Artequin or ASMQ This has been used as an efficacious first line treatment regimen in areas of Thailand for many years Mefloquine is known to cause vomiting in children and induces some neuropsychiatric and cardiotoxic effects These adverse reactions seem to be reduced when the drug is combined with artesunate it is suggested that this is due to a delayed onset of action of mefloquine This is not considered a viable option to be introduced in Africa due to the long half life of mefloquine which potentially could exert a high selection pressure on parasites It s recommended by the WHO for uncomplicated falciparum malaria 5 page needed The standard dose required is 4 mg kg per day of Artesunate plus 25 mg kg of Mefloquine as a split dose of 15 mg kg on day two and 10 mg kg on day three Artemether and lumefantrine Coartem Riamet Faverid Amatem Lonart or AL This combination has been extensively tested in 16 clinical trials proving effective in children under five and has been shown to be better tolerated than artesunate plus mefloquine combinations There are no serious side effects documented but the drug is not recommended in pregnant or lactating women due to limited safety testing in these groups This is the most viable option for widespread use and is available in fixed dose formulas thus increasing compliance and adherence It s recommended by the WHO for uncomplicated falciparum malaria 5 page needed Artesunate and sulfadoxine pyrimethamine Ariplus or Amalar plus This is a well tolerated combination but the overall level of efficacy still depends on the level of resistance to sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine thus limiting is usage It is recommended by the WHO for uncomplicated falciparum malaria 5 page needed It is recommended in doses of 4 mg kg of Artesunate per day for three days and a single dose of 25 mg kg of SP Dihydroartemisinin piperaquine Duo Cotecxin or Artekin Has been studied mainly in China Vietnam and other countries in SEAsia The drug has been shown to be highly efficacious greater than 90 It s recommended by the WHO for uncomplicated falciparum malaria 5 page needed Artesinin piperaguine primaquine Fast Elimination of Malaria through Source Eradication FEMSE This protocol involves three doses of Artequick spaced a month apart The first dose is accompanied by one of primaquine An experimental program in the Comoros islands employed the protocol At the outset more than 90 of the inhabitants of some villages had malaria On one island the number of cases fell by 95 In 2012 on the second island the number of cases fell by 97 25 Pyronaridine and artesunate Pyramax Pyramax developed by Shin Poong Pharmaceutical and Medicines for Malaria Venture MMV This is a first fixed dose artemisinin based combination therapy to be granted a positive scientific opinion for efficacy safety and quality from European Medicines Agency EMA under Article 58 for the treatment of P falciparum and P vivax in adults and children over 20 kg based on five multi centre phase III trials conducted in Africa and South East Asia Pyramax has been shown to be highly efficacious greater than 97 in both species and only ACT approved by stringent regulatory authority for treatment of both P falciparum and P vivax by now Other combinations edit Several other anti malarial combinations have been used or are in development For example Chlorproguanil dapsone and artesunate appeared efficacious in trials from the late 90s and 2000s but the problem of haemolysis in patients with glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase G6PD deficiency is likely to prevent widespread use 26 By type of malaria editAntimalarial drugs and combinations may also be sorted according to the type of malaria in which they are used Falciparum malaria edit Further information in treatment section of Plasmodium falciparum Artemisinin based combination therapies ACTs are the recommended antimalarial treatments for uncomplicated malaria caused by P falciparum 5 page needed The choice of ACT in a country or region will be based on the level of resistance to the constituents in the combination 5 page needed For pregnant women the recommended first line treatment during the first trimester is quinine plus clindamycin to be given for seven days 5 page needed In second and third trimesters it is recommended to give ACTs known to be effective in the country region or artesunate plus clindamycin for seven days or quinine plus clindamycin to be given for seven days 5 page needed Lactating women should receive standard antimalarial treatment including ACTs except for dapsone primaquine and tetracyclines In infants and young children it is recommended to give ACTs for first line treatment with attention to accurate dosing and ensuring the administered dose is retained 5 page needed In severe falciparum malaria it is recommended that rapid clinical assessment and confirmation of the diagnosis is made followed by administration of full doses of parenteral antimalarial treatment without delay with whichever effective antimalarial is first available 5 page needed For adults intravenous IV or intramuscular IM artesunate is recommended 5 Quinine is an acceptable alternative if parenteral artesunate is not available 5 page needed Parenteral antimalarials should be administered for a minimum of 24 h in the treatment of severe malaria irrespective of the patient s ability to tolerate oral medication earlier 5 page needed Thereafter it is recommended to complete treatment by giving a complete course of any of the following 5 page needed an ACT artesunate plus clindamycin or doxycycline quinine plus clindamycin or doxycycline Vivax malaria edit Further information in treatment section of Plasmodium vivax Chloroquine remains the treatment of choice for vivax malaria 5 page needed except in Indonesia s Irian Jaya Western New Guinea region and the geographically contiguous Papua New Guinea where chloroquine resistance is common up to 20 resistance Malaria in poultry edit Main article Malaria in poultry No medications are approved in the United States for treatment of malaria in poultry 27 See also editDiospyros melanoxylon tree with possible antiplasmodial properties Malaria prophylaxis Medicines for Malaria Venture MMV a not for profit organization which is managing the largest ever portfolio of over 50 antimalarial projects in collaboration with over 100 pharmaceutical academic and endemic country partners in 38 countries Amazon Malaria Initiative a regional USAID project in 11 countries in the Latin America and the Caribbean region RAVREDA a regional network of national malaria control programs that conduct antimalarial drug efficacy surveillance and other activities to address malaria Project 523References edit a b c d e Ashley Elizabeth A Phyo Aung Pyae 25 May 2018 Drugs in Development for Malaria Drugs 78 9 861 879 doi 10 1007 s40265 018 0911 9 PMC 6013505 PMID 29802605 Mittra Robert A Mieler William F 2013 Drug Toxicity of the Posterior Segment Retina pp 1532 1554 doi 10 1016 B978 1 4557 0737 9 00089 8 ISBN 978 1 4557 0737 9 Updating the WHO G6PD classification of variants and the International Classification of Diseases PDF www who int 2019 Retrieved 2020 03 24 Prevention CDC Centers for Disease Control and 2023 06 28 CDC Malaria Diagnosis amp Treatment United States Treatment U S Guidelines for Clinicians Part 1 www cdc gov Retrieved 2023 09 12 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w World Health Organization 2015 Guidelines for the treatment of malaria Third ed World Health Organization WHO hdl 10665 162441 ISBN 978 92 4 154912 7 Kuecken Maria Thuilliez Josselin Valfort Marie Anne 2020 Disease and Human Capital Accumulation Evidence from the Roll Back Malaria Partnership in Africa The Economic Journal 131 637 2171 2202 doi 10 1093 ej ueaa134 Sparkes Roland Article www belmonthistory org uk 1 Archived 2022 08 06 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 2010 01 05 full citation needed Fact check Hydroxychloroquine is not the same as quinine and can t be made at home Reuters 31 May 2020 New preparation of hydroxychloroquine Preparation method of hydroxychloroquine sulfate a b Scholar Eric 2007 01 01 Enna S J Bylund David B eds Amodiaquine xPharm The Comprehensive Pharmacology Reference New York Elsevier pp 1 4 ISBN 978 0 08 055232 3 retrieved 2023 08 04 a b Pyrimethamine go drugbank com Retrieved 2023 08 04 a b Proguanil go drugbank com Retrieved 2023 08 04 Frans Timmerhuis 2013 02 04 Handboek wereldreiziger Elmar B V Uitgeverij ISBN 978 90 389 2055 9 Markus MB 2018 Biological Concepts in Recurrent Plasmodium vivax Malaria Parasitology 145 13 1765 1771 doi 10 1017 S003118201800032X PMID 29564998 S2CID 206250162 Dicko Alassane Roh Michelle E Diawara Halimatou Mahamar Almahamoudou Soumare Harouna M Lanke Kjerstin Bradley John Sanogo Koualy Kone Daouda T Diarra Kalifa Keita Sekouba Issiaka Djibrilla Traore Sekou F McCulloch Charles Stone Will J R Hwang Jimee Muller Olaf Brown Joelle M Srinivasan Vinay Drakeley Chris Gosling Roly Chen Ingrid Bousema Teun June 2018 Efficacy and safety of primaquine and methylene blue for prevention of Plasmodium falciparum transmission in Mali a phase 2 single blind randomised controlled trial The Lancet Infectious Diseases 18 6 627 639 doi 10 1016 S1473 3099 18 30044 6 PMC 5968371 PMID 29422384 Rectal artemisinins rapidly eliminate malarial parasites EurekAlert 2008 03 27 Archived from the original on 3 April 2008 Retrieved 2008 03 28 The History of Traditional Chinese Medicine Archived from the original on 25 December 2007 Retrieved 2007 12 19 Using Artemisia annua L tea to fight malaria PDF November 13 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 11 13 van Vugt M Brockman A Gemperli B Luxemburger C Gathmann I Royce C Slight T Looareesuwan S White NJ Nosten F January 1998 Randomized comparison of artemether benflumetol and artesunate mefloquine in treatment of multidrug resistant falciparum malaria Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 42 1 135 9 doi 10 1128 AAC 42 1 135 PMC 105468 PMID 9449273 Velebny Samuel Hrckova Gabriela Dec 13 2012 Pharmacological Potential of Selected Natural Compounds in the Control of Parasitic Diseases Springer Science amp Business Media p 3 ISBN 9783709113264 White NJ April 2004 Antimalarial drug resistance J Clin Invest 113 8 1084 92 doi 10 1172 JCI21682 PMC 385418 PMID 15085184 Antony HA Parija SC 2016 Antimalarial drug resistance An overview Tropical Parasitology 6 1 30 41 doi 10 4103 2229 5070 175081 PMC 4778180 PMID 26998432 Lim P Alker AP Khim N et al 2009 Pfmdr1 copy number and arteminisin derivatives combination therapy failure in falciparum malaria in Cambodia Malar J 8 11 doi 10 1186 1475 2875 8 11 PMC 2627910 PMID 19138391 Malaria eradication Cure all The Economist 2014 01 25 Retrieved 2014 02 16 Premji Z Umeh RE Owusu Agyei S et al 2009 Chlorproguanil dapsone artesunate versus artemether lumefantrine a randomized double blind phase III trial in African children and adolescents with uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria PLOS ONE 4 8 e6682 Bibcode 2009PLoSO 4 6682P doi 10 1371 journal pone 0006682 PMC 2724683 PMID 19690618 Wettere Arnaud J Van 2020 02 25 Plasmodium Infection in Poultry Poultry Merck Veterinary Manual Retrieved 2022 07 21 Further reading editWorld Health Organization 2015 Guidelines for the treatment of malaria Third ed World Health Organization WHO hdl 10665 162441 ISBN 978 92 4 154912 7 World Health Organization 2012 Management of severe malaria a practical handbook Third ed World Health Organization WHO hdl 10665 79317 ISBN 978 92 4 154852 6 External links edit nbsp Scholia has a topic profile for Antimalarial medication Medicines for Malaria Venture MMV MMV MMV Science for information on the largest ever portfolio of over 50 antimalarial projects working in collaboration with over 100 pharmaceutical academic and endemic country partners in 38 countries The Worldwide Antimalarial Resistance Network WWARN is a global collaboration generating quality assured timely information to track the emergence and spread of antimalarial resistance critical information for ensuring that anyone infected with malaria receives safe and effective treatment 2007 guidelines are available from the UK Health Protection Agency Archived 2013 09 28 at the Wayback Machine website as a PDF file and includes detailed country specific information for UK travelers The World Health Organization provides country specific advice on malaria prevention HPA and WHO advice are broadly in line with each other although there are some differences The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website hosts constantly updated country specific information on malaria The advice on this website is less detailed is very cautious and may not be appropriate for all areas within a given country This is the preferred site for travelers from the US Portal nbsp Medicine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antimalarial medication amp oldid 1205543623 Artemisinin based combination therapies ACTs, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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