| Literature DB >> 19818172 |
Michael Makanga1, Srivicha Krudsood.
Abstract
Current World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines for the treatment of uncomplicated falciparum malaria recommend the use of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT). Artemether/lumefantrine is an ACT prequalified by the WHO for efficacy, safety and quality, approved by Swissmedic in December 2008 and recently approved by the USA FDA. Coartem is a fixed-dose combination of artemether and lumefantrine. Its two components have different modes of action that provide synergistic anti-malarial activity. It is indicated for the treatment of infants, children and adults with acute, uncomplicated infection due to Plasmodium falciparum or mixed infections including P. falciparum. A formulation with improved palatability has been developed especially for children (Coartem Dispersible), which rapidly disperses in a small amount of water for ease of administration. The efficacy of the six-dose regimen of artemether/lumefantrine has been confirmed in many different patient populations around the world, consistently achieving 28-day PCR (polymerase chain reaction)-corrected cure rates of >95% in the evaluable population, rapidly clearing parasitaemia and fever, and demonstrating a significant gametocidal effect, even in areas of widespread parasite resistance to other antimalarials.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19818172 PMCID: PMC2760240 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-8-S1-S5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Clinical studies evaluating the efficacy and safety of the six-dose regimen of artemether/lumefantrine
| Design | Randomized double-blind | Randomized open-label | Randomized open-label | Open-label | Randomized investigator blind | Open-label |
| Comparator | Four-dose regimen | MASa | MASa | - | Dispersible formulation | - |
| Patients | Adults & children (>2 years) | Adults & children (≥ 2 years) | Adults & adolescents (>12 years) | Infants & children (5 to 25 kg) | Infants & children (5 to <35 kg) | Adult non-immune travellers |
| N AL/total Geography | 120/359b | 150/200 | 164/219 | 310 | 452/899 | 165 |
| Thailand | Thailand | Thailand | Kenya | Kenya | EU | |
| Tanzania | Tanzania | Colombia | ||||
| Nigeria | Mali | |||||
| Benin | ||||||
| Mozambique | ||||||
| 28-day PCR-corrected cure rate (evaluable pts) | 96.9% | 97.7% | 95.5% | 96.7% | 97.8% | 96.0% |
| Median time to fever clearance (h) (mITT popn) | 35 (n = 59) | 22 (n = 87) | 29 (n = 76) | 7.8 (n = 309) | 7.8 (n = 311) | 36.5 (n = 100) |
| Median time to parasite clearance (h) (mITT popn) | 43.6 (n = 118) | 48 (n = 149) | 29.3 (n = 164) | 24.0 (n = 310) | 34.9 (n = 452) | 41.8 (n = 162) |
aStudy was not designed to compare AL with mefloquine + artesunate; bAL over 60 hours; c28-day cure rate was a secondary endpoint. Abbreviations: AL, artemether/lumefantrine; MAS, mefloquine + artesunate.
Figure 128-day PCR-corrected cure rate for artemether/lumefantrine in Studies A025,A026 and A028 [10-12].
Figure 2Efficacy of dispersible AL formulation across body weight groups [14].
Figure 3Median time to (A) parasite clearance and (B) fever clearance for dispersible artemether/lumefantrine formulation and crushed tablets [14].
Figure 428-day PCR-corrected cure rate for AL in Study A2401 [15].
Published studies with the six-dose AL regimen in Africa
| Bukirwa et al 2006 [ | Uganda | Randomized, single-blind, single centre in children (1-10 years) | AL (n = 208) | Primary efficacy outcome was the 28-day risk of recurrent symptomatic malaria (AL = 27%;ASAQ = 42%) and recurrent parasitaemia (AL = 51%;ASAQ = 66%) both unadjusted for re-infection (both p = 0.001). When corrected for re-infection using PCR, the risks for both recurrent symptomatic malaria and parasitaemia were 0% for ASAQ and 1% for AL (equivalent to PCR-adjusted 28-day parasitological cure rates of 100% and 99%, respectively), illustrating the high rate of re-infection in the area studied. |
| Dorsey et al 2007 [ | Uganda | Single-blind, randomized, single centre in children (1-10 years) | AL (n = 105) | PCR-corrected 28-day cure rates of 99% with AL, 95.4% with ASAQ and 85.9% with AQSP. The differences between AL and AQSP, and between ASAQ and AQSP were statistically significant (p < 0.001 and p = 0.08, respectively). |
| Gürkov et al 2008 [ | Ethiopia | One centre, comparative in adults and children >5 years of age | AL (n = 30) | At 28-days, there were no treatment failures in the AL group, but the PCR-confirmed recrudescence rates in the quinine and atovaquone/proguanil groups were 9% and 6%, respectively. |
| Kabanywanyi et al 2007 [ | Tanzania | Randomized, open-label, 2-centre in children (6-59 months) | AL (n = 99) | 28-day PCR-corrected rates of adequate clinical and parasitological response were 100% for AL and 93.8% for ASAQ. Late parasitological failures, in all cases due to re-infection rather than recrudescence, occurred in 12% and 29% of each group, respectively. |
| Kamya et al 2007 [ | Uganda | Single-blind, randomized, single centre in children (6 months to 10 years) | AL (n = 210) | PCR-corrected risk of recurrent parasitaemia at Day 28 was significantly lower with DP than with AL (1.9% vs. 8.9%); this was also the case at Day 42 (6.9% vs. 16%). However, due to the complexity of infection in this area of very high transmission, leading to difficulty in distinguishing between new and recrudescent infections, the risks of recrudescence are probably overstated. |
| Mårtensson et al 2005 [ | Zanzibar | Multicenter, randomized, open-label in children (6-59 months) | AL (n = 200) | PCR-corrected 28-day and 42-day parasitological cure rates of 97% and 92%, respectively, for AL and 91% and 88%, respectively, for ASAQ (p = 0.001 at 28 days and p = 0.045 at 42 days). |
| Mårtensson et al 2007 [ | Tanzania | Randomized, single centre, open-label study in children | AL (n = 50) | PCR-corrected 42-day parasitological cure rates were 98% or 94% in the AL group (depending on whether standard or enhanced PCR was used); corresponding figures in the SP group were 70% and 66%, respectively. |
| Mohamed et al 2006 [ | Sudan | 2-centre, open-label, treatment assigned by centre, in children and adults | AL (n = 72) | In this area of low malaria transmission both AL and ASSP were associated with adequate clinical and parasitological response rates of 100% at Day 28. |
| Mukhtar et al 2007 [ | Sudan | Randomized, single centre, open-label study in children & adults | AL (n = 80) | PCR-corrected rates of adequate clinical and parasitological response of 93.4% for ASSP and 91.3% for AL. The treatment regimen used was not clear. |
| Mutabingwa et al 2005 [ | Tanzania | Randomized, single centre, open-label study in children | AL (n = 519) | PCR-corrected 28-day parasitological cure rates were 51.6% for AQ, 65.5% for AQSP, 88.8% for ASAQ, and 97.2% for AL. |
| Yeka et al 2008 [ | Uganda | Randomized, one centre, single-blinded, in children aged 6 months to 10 years | AL (n = 227) | At 42 days there was no statistically significant difference in the risk of recrudescence (5.8% for AL vs. 2.0% for DP; risk difference = 3.8%, 95% CI 0.2-7.8%), although recurrent parasitaemia (uncorrected for re-infection) was more frequent with AL (33.2% vs. 12.2% for DP). |
| Mulenga et al 2006 [ | Zambia | Randomized, open-label, multicentre, in adults | AL (n = 485) | AL was associated with significantly faster clearance of fever, parasitaemia and gametocytes than SP, and a higher Day 45 PCR-corrected cure rate (94.6% vs. 80.7%, p < 0.001). |
| Toovey 2008 [ | Mozambique | Non-comparative, open-label, single centre in adults | AL (n = 54) | 28-day parasitological cure rate of 100%. |
| Adjei et al 2008 [ | Ghana | Randomized, open label | AL (n = 111) | For the AL group, adequate clinical and parasitological response was reported in 97.1% patients at Day 14 and 94.2% at Day 28; corresponding figures for ASAQ were 98.2% and 95.3%. |
| Falade et al 2008 [ | Nigeria | Randomized, open label, single centre in children (6 months to 10 years) | AL (n = 66) | PCR-corrected 28-day parasitological cure rates of 100% for AL and 98.4% for ASAQ. |
| Faye et al 2007 [ | Senegal | Randomized, open-label, multicentre in children and adults | ASAQ (n = 360) | PCR-corrected 28-day parasitological cure rates were 100% for all treatments other than AL four-dose (96.4%). Parasite clearance was observed to be more rapid with all ACTs than with AQSP. |
| Koram et al 2005 [ | Ghana | Multicentre, randomized, open-label in children (6-59 months) | AL (n = 51) | PCR-corrected 28-day cure rates of 25% for chloroquine, 60% for SP, 100% for ASAQ, and 97.5% for AL. |
| Meremikwu et al 2006 [ | Nigeria | Randomized, open-label, single centre, in children (6-59 months) | AL (n = 60) | Both treatments highly effective with similar rates of adequate clinical and parasitological response, early treatment failure, late clinical failure and late parasitological failure at 14 days. |
| Owusi-Agyei et al 2008 [ | Ghana | Randomized, open label in children aged 6 months to 10 years | AL (n = 223) | Per-protocol analysis showed a lower PCR-corrected parasitological and clinical failure rate at day 28 in the ASAQ group (6.6%) compared with the AL group (13.8%) or ASCD group (13.8%). |
| Sagara et al 2006 [ | Mali | Randomized, single centre, open-label study in children (≥ 6 months) and adults | AL (n = 303) | 28-day PCR-corrected parasitological cure rates were 100% for AS plus sulphamethoxypyrazine plus pyrimethamine, and 99% for AL. |
| Sowunmi et al 2007 [ | Nigeria | Randomized, open-label, single centre, in children (≤ 10 years) | AL (n = 90) | PCR-corrected parasitological cure rates at 42 days were 93.3% for AL and 98.9% for AQ plus sulphalene plus pyrimethamine. |
| Sutherland et al 2005 [ | Gambia | Randomized, single centre, single-blind, in children (1-10 years) | AL (n = 406) | PCR-corrected 28-day cure rates were 96.1% for AL and 91.1% for CQSP. |
| Zongo et al 2007 [ | Burkina Faso | Multicentre, randomized, open-label in children (6 months to 10 years) | AL (n = 261) | The crude (uncorrected for re-infection) risk of recurrent malaria at 28 days was significantly higher with AL than AQSP (10.2% vs. 1.7%, p < 0.0001); PCR correction gave risks of recurrent malaria of 1.2% and 0.4%, with the between-group difference not statistically significant. |
| Zongo et al 2007 [ | Burkina Faso | Multicentre, randomized, open-label in children (≥ 6 months) | AL (n = 188) | PCR-corrected risks of re-infection at Day 28 were AL, 3.4%; DP, 2.2% and AQSP, 3.9%. |
| Fanello et al 2007 [ | Rwanda | Randomized, open-label, 2-centre in children (12-59 months) | AL (n = 251) | AL was associated with a statistically significantly higher rate of PCR-adjusted adequate clinical and parasitological response at Day 28 than AQSP (96.8% vs. 79.4%, p < 0.0001). |
| Guthman et al 2006 [ | Angola | Randomized, open-label, single centre in children (6-59 months) | AL (n = 61) | PCR-corrected 28-day parasitological cure rates were 100% for both AL and ASAQ. |
| Ndayiragije et al 2004 [ | Burundi | Multicentre, randomized, open-label in children (<5 years) | AL (n = 142) | 14-day rates of adequate clinical and parasitological response were similar between treatment groups:AL = 99.3%;ASAQ = 95.3%. |
| van den Broek et al 2006 [ | Republic of Congo | Randomized, single centre, open-label study in children (6-59 months) | AL (n = 106) | PCR-corrected 28-day parasitological cure rates were 100% for AL, 98.5% for ASAQ and 90.1% for ASSP. The differences in cure rates between AL and ASSP, and between ASAQ and ASSP, were statistically significant. |
AL:Artemether/lumefantrine; CQ: Chloroquine; SP: Sulphadoxine plus pyrimethamine; CQSP: Chloroquine plus sulphadoxine plus pyrimethamine;AS: Artesunate;AQ:Amodiaquine;ASAQ:Amodiaquine plus artesunate;AQSP:Amodiaquine plus sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine; DP: dihydroartemisinin plus piperaquine; MAS: mefloquine plus artesunate
Published studies with the six-dose artemether/lumefantrine regimen in Asia
| Krudsood et al 2003 [ | Thailand | Randomized, open-label, single centre in adults | AL (n = 41) | The 28-day parasitological cure rates (not PCR corrected) were 99% for DNP and 97% for AL. |
| Rojanawatsirivej et al 2003 [ | Thailand | Open-label, multicentre, adults & children (10-74 years), treatment by area (all treatment groups also received primaquine) | AL (n = 33) | All 33 (100%) patients treated with AL plus primaquine had adequate clinical response (i.e. parasitological cure at Day 28), compared with 86.3% of the 80 patients who received mefloquine plus primaquine. |
| Stohrer et al 2004 [ | Laos | Randomized, open-label, single centre, in adults & children (≥ 10 kg) | AL (n = 53) | PCR-corrected cure rates at Day 42 were 93.6% for AL and 100% for MAS. The difference between treatment groups was not statistically significant. Day 28 cure rates were identical to those at Day 42. |
| Mayxay et al 2004 [ | Laos | Randomized, open-label, single centre, in adolescents and adults (12-19 years) | AL (n = 110) | 42-day PCR-corrected parasitological cure rates were 97% for AL, 100% for MAS and 93% for CQSP. The difference in cure rates between MAS and CQSP was statistically significant. |
| Ratcliff et al 2007 [ | Indonesia | Randomized, open-label, 2-centre in children (body weight ≥ 10 kg) and adults with | AL (n = 387) | For |
| Hutagalung 2005 [ | Thailand | Randomized, open-label, 2-centre, in children (>10 kg) and adults | AL (n = 245) | Both treatments were associated with rapid clearance of fever and parasitaemia. 42-day parasitological cure rates were 98.8% for AL and 96.3% for MAS. |
| van den Broek et al 2005 [ | Bangladesh | Randomized, open-label, single centre, in adults & children (≥ 1 year) | AL (n = 121) | Day 42 PCR-corrected cure rates were 62.4% for CQSP, 100% for MAS and 97.1% for AL. The cure rate in the CQSP group was statistically significantly lower than that in the other treatment groups. |
| Haque et al 2007 [ | Bangladesh | Open-label, non-comparative, 2-centre in adults (≥ 18 years) | AL (n = 67) | Rapid fever and parasite clearance, and PCR-corrected 28- and 42-day parasitological cure rates of 98.3% and 94.3%, respectively. |
| Thapa et al 2007 [ | Nepal | Randomized, open-label, single centre, in adults & children (>5 years) | AL (n = 66) | The 28-day PCR-corrected parasitological cure rate for AL was 100%, compared with 87.9% in the SP group (p = 0.011). |
1Includes 2 MAS regimens (mefloquine at 25 mg/kg, n = 153, and 15 mg/kg, n = 46);AL: artemether/lumefantrine; SP: sulphadoxine plus pyrimethamine; CQSP: Chloroquine plus sulphadoxine pyrimethamine; DP: Dihydroartemisinin plus piperaquine; DNP: dihydroartemisinin, napthoquine and trimethoprim; MAS: mefloquine plus artesunate
Results of a meta-analysis comparing the efficacy of several anti-malarial combinations [54]
| Artemether/lumefantrine (AL) | 97.4 |
| Mefloquine + artesunate (MAS) | 96.9 |
| Amodiaquine + artesunate (ASAQ) | 88.5 |
| Amodiaquine + sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (AQSP) | 85.7 |
| Sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine + artesunate | 82.6 |
| Chloroquine+ sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (CQSP) | 72.1 |
| Chloroquine + artesunate | 45.3 |