Literature DB >> 12904156

Safety evaluation of the drugs available to prevent malaria.

Ashley M Croft1, Dominic P Whitehouse, Gordon C Cook, M Dominic Beer.   

Abstract

All drugs used for malaria prophylaxis have common adverse effects, in addition to rare and/or severe adverse effects. For many of the drugs in current use, the common adverse effects include neuropsychiatric harms. This property makes these drugs unpopular with tourists and business travellers, most of whom will be well at the start of chemoprophylaxis. Drugs available to prevent malaria have not been rigorously researched in terms of the phenomenology of their unwanted effects. Consequently, prescribers are not well placed to give useful information to travellers on the incidence, natural history and avoidability of the harms they may experience from malaria chemoprophylaxis. There is some evidence that the adverse effects of mefloquine may be a post-hepatic syndrome caused by drug-induced liver damage with, in some users, symptomatic thyroid disturbance. However, confusion in the interpretation of the scientific evidence has led to conflicting messages regarding the safety of mefloquine and other antimalaria drugs, and to incorrect self-therapy by individual travellers, sometimes with fatal outcomes. In this review, the existing knowledge base for the safety of drugs currently used to prevent malaria is described along with present designs for future studies that would allow a rigorous safety assessment of candidate chemoprophylactic agents and of new drugs introduced to prevent malaria. There is an urgent need for internationally-agreed, evidence-based malaria prevention guidelines. These guidelines should be explicitly linked to the best available research evidence (normally systematic reviews of trials and individual randomised trials) and should highlight gaps in the knowledge base as priority areas for research.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12904156     DOI: 10.1517/14740338.1.1.19

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Expert Opin Drug Saf        ISSN: 1474-0338            Impact factor:   4.250


  5 in total

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2.  Success of malaria chemoprophylaxis for outbound civil and military travellers in prevention of reintroduction of malaria in Sri Lanka.

Authors:  Sumadhya D Fernando; Dewanee Ranaweera; Methnie S Weerasena; Rahuman Booso; Thamara Wickramasekara; Chirath P Madurapperuma; Manjula Danansuriya; Chaturaka Rodrigo; Hemantha Herath
Journal:  Int Health       Date:  2020-07-01       Impact factor: 2.473

3.  Case Study of Small Molecules As Antimalarials: 2-Amino-1-phenylethanol (APE) Derivatives.

Authors:  María J Chaparro; Jaume Vidal; Iñigo Angulo-Barturen; José M Bueno; Jeremy Burrows; Nicholas Cammack; Pablo Castañeda; Gonzalo Colmenarejo; José M Coterón; Laura de Las Heras; Esther Fernández; Santiago Ferrer; Raquel Gabarró; Francisco J Gamo; Mercedes García; María B Jiménez-Díaz; María J Lafuente; María L León; María S Martínez; Douglas Minick; Sara Prats; Margarita Puente; Lourdes Rueda; Elena Sandoval; Angel Santos-Villarejo; Michael Witty; Félix Calderón
Journal:  ACS Med Chem Lett       Date:  2014-03-26       Impact factor: 4.345

4.  Severity of imported malaria: protective effect of taking malaria chemoprophylaxis.

Authors:  Klaske Vliegenthart-Jongbloed; Mariana de Mendonça Melo; Marlies E van Wolfswinkel; Rob Koelewijn; Jaap J van Hellemond; Perry J J van Genderen
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2013-07-31       Impact factor: 2.979

5.  Safety and tolerability of adjunctive rosiglitazone treatment for children with uncomplicated malaria.

Authors:  Rosauro Varo; Valerie M Crowley; Antonio Sitoe; Lola Madrid; Lena Serghides; Rubao Bila; Helio Mucavele; Alfredo Mayor; Quique Bassat; Kevin C Kain
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  5 in total

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