| Literature DB >> 21736423 |
R Matthew Chico1, Daniel Chandramohan.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The first-line therapy for the intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp) is sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP). There is an urgent need to identify safe, well-tolerated and efficacious alternatives to SP due to widespread Plasmodium falciparum resistance. Combination therapy using azithromycin and chloroquine is one possibility that has demonstrated adequate parasitological response > 95% in clinical trials of non-pregnant adults in sub-Saharan Africa and where IPTp is a government policy in 33 countries. AREAS COVERED: Key safety, tolerability and efficacy data are presented for azithromycin and chloroquine, alone and/or in combination, when used to prevent and/or treat P. falciparum, P. vivax, and several curable sexually transmitted and reproductive tract infections (STI/RTI). Pharmacokinetic evidence from pregnant women is also summarized for both compounds. EXPERT OPINION: The azithromycin-chloroquine regimen that has demonstrated consistent efficacy in non-pregnant adults has been a 3-day course containing daily doses of 1 g of azithromycin and 600 mg base of chloroquine. The pharmacokinetic evidence of these compounds individually suggests that dose adjustments may not be necessary when used in combination for treatment efficacy against P. falciparum, P. vivax, as well as several curable STI/RTI among pregnant women, although clinical confirmation will be necessary. Mass trachoma-treatment campaigns have shown that azithromycin selects for macrolide resistance in the pneumococcus, which reverses following the completion of therapy. Most importantly, no evidence to date suggests that azithromycin induces pneumococcal resistance to penicillin.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21736423 PMCID: PMC3170143 DOI: 10.1517/17425255.2011.598506
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Expert Opin Drug Metab Toxicol ISSN: 1742-5255 Impact factor: 4.481
Optimal IPTp drug profile.
| The optimal IPTp therapy would be a combination of two molecules that: | |
|---|---|
| ✓ | Exhibit similar time above minimum inhibitory concentrations |
| ✓ | Support a once per month dosing regimen (≤ 2 doses) |
| ✓ | Have different mode of actions to reduce resistance selection |
| ✓ | Are active against asexual & sexual stages |
| ✓ | Are not necessarily rapid acting |
| ✓ | Are either a fixed dose or loose combination |
| ✓ | Different from first line treatment for symptomatic malaria |
| ✓ | Ideally active against other treatable maternal health problems, e.g. STI/RTI, maternal-fetal transmission of infection |
| ✓ | Are safe during all the pregnancy, although pregnant women are unlikely to receive the first dose of IPTp in the first trimester |
| ✓ | Cost as little as possible per pregnancy with prices that are in line with current price estimates for artemisinin combination therapy (ACT) |
Symptomatic women are treated with ACTs.
Source: Duparc, S. (2011). Personal communication. Medicines for Malaria Venture, Geneva, Switzerland.
Efficacy of azithromycin, chloroquine or the combination against P. Falciparum infection observed among non-pregnant adults and children in recent studies.
| Country | Years of study [Ref.] | Drug regimen | Sample size | PCR-unadjusted APR at day 28 (95% CI) | PCR-adjusted APR at day 28 (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Western Kenya | 2004 [ | 1 g AZ plus 600 mg CQ days 0, 1, 2 | 5 | NA | 100% (NA) |
| 600 mg CQ days 0, 1, 2 plus AZ placebo | 7 | NA | 87.5% (59.8 – 100) | ||
| Malawi (children) | 2005 [ | 10 mg/kg CQ days 0, 1 and 5 mg/kg CQ day 2 | 80 | NA | 98.7% (96.3 – 100) |
| SP (1.25 mg/kg and 5 mg/kg) day 0 | 87 | NA | 18.4% (10.3 – 26.5) | ||
| Ghana, Kenya, Mali, Uganda, Zambia | 2004 – 2006 [ | 1 g AZ and 600 mg CQ days 0, 1, 2 plus MQ placebo day 0 | 103 | NA | 98.1% (95.4 – 100) |
| 500 mg AZ and 600 mg CQ days 0, 1, 2 plus MQ placebo day 0 | Arm suspended: inadequate efficacy of regimen outside of Africa | ||||
| 750 mg MQ and 500 mg MQ day 0 plus placebo AZ and CQ days 0, 1, 2 | 103 | NA | 99.0% (97.1 – 100) | ||
| Burkina Faso, Ghana, Kenya, Mali, Senegal, Zambia | 2006 – 2007 [ | 1 g AZ and 600 mg CQ days 0, 1, 2 | 107 | NA | 100% (NA) |
| 750 mg MQ and 500 mg MQ day 0 | 112 | NA | 99.1% (97.4 – 100) | ||
| Guinea-Bissau (children) | 2006 – 2008 [ | 50 mg/kg CQ in 6 doses days 0, 1, 2 | 158 | NA | 95.1% |
| AL (20 mg/120 mg) up to 4 tablets at 0, 8, 24, 36, 48 and 60 h | 168 | NA | 96.6% | ||
| India | 1998 – 2001 [ | 1 g AZ plus CQ placebo days 0, 1, 2 | 15 | 33.3% (9.5 – 57.2) | NA |
| 600 mg CQ days 0, 1 plus placebo AZ day- 0, 1, 2 and CQ day 2 | 15 | 26.7% (4.3 – 49.1) | NA | ||
| 1 g AZ days 0, 1, 2 and 600 mg CQ days 0, 1 and 300 mg CQ day 2 | 63 | 96.8% (92.5 – 100) | NA | ||
| India | 2004 – 2005 [ | 1 g AZ days 0, 1, 2 and 600 mg CQ day- 0, 1 and 300 mg CQ day 2 | 73 | 83.6% (75.1 – 92.1) | NA |
| 500 mg AZ and 600 mg CQ days 0, 1, 2 plus placebo 500 mg AZ days 0, 1, 2 | 59 | 66.1% (54.0 – 78.2) | NA | ||
| 600 mg CQ days 0, 1 and 300 mg CQ day 2 SP (1.5 g/75 mg) day 0 | 72 | 94.4% (89.2 – 99.7) | NA | ||
| Indonesia | 2004 – 2005 [ | 1 g AZ and 600 mg CQ days 0, 1, 2 plus placebo SP day 0 | 13 | NA | 30.8% (5.7 – 55.9) |
| 500 mg AZ and 600 mg CQ days 0, 1, 2 plus placebo 500 mg AZ days 0, 1, 2 and placebo SP day 0 | Arm suspended after 19 randomizations; no efficacy data reported | ||||
| SP (1.5 g/75 mg) day 0 plus placebo 1 g AZ and placebo 600 mg CQ days 0, 1, 2 | 10 | NA | 80% (55.2 – 100) | ||
| Colombia and Suriname | 2004 – 2005 [ | 1 g AZ days 0, 1, 2 and 600 mg CQ days 0, 1 and 300 mg CQ day 2 | 112 | NA | 60.1% (51.7 – 68.8) |
| 500 mg AZ and 600 mg CQ days 0, 1, 2 plus placebo 500 mg AZ days 0, 1, 2 | Arm suspended: inadequate efficacy 36.4% (4/11) day-28 PCR-unadjusted | ||||
| AP (1 g/400 mg) days 0, 1, 2 | 113 | 100% (NA) | |||
| Colombia and India | 2006 – 2008 [ | 2 g AZ and 600 mg CQ days 0, 1, 2 | 107 | NA | 97.2% (94.1 – 100) |
Appropriate clinical and parasitic response (ACPR).
Partially PCR-adjusted.
AL: Artemether–lumefantrine (Coartem®); AP: Atovaquone–proguanil; AZ: Azithromycin; CQ: Chloroquine; MQ: Mefloquine; PCR: Polymerase chain reaction; PQ: Piperaquine; SP: Sulphadoxine–pyrimethamine.
Figure 1Pharmacokinetic elimination of 1 g azithromycin through maternal serum and myometriai, adipose and placental tissue (ng/ml/h). Adapted from [96].
Drug interactions with chloroquine.
| Drug | Type | Interaction with chloroquine | Clinical significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chlorpromazine | Antipsychotics | Chloroquine, SP and amodiaquine increase serum concentrations of chlorpromazine 1.7 – 4.3 times [ | Unknown |
| Cimetidine | Histamine h2-receptor antagonist | Cimetidine increases serum concentration of chloroquine prolonging its half-life 48% [ | Unknown |
| Codeine | Opiate | Chloroquine inhibits CYP2D6 and may theoretically interfere with bio-activation of codeine to morphine [ | Unknown |
| Cyclosporine | Immunosuppressant | Cyclosporine concentrations increase up to 4.3 times when used with chloroquine [ | Cyclosporine dosages may need to be reduced during concomitant chloroquine use |
| Kaolin-Pectin | Antidiarrhoeal | Kaolin–Pectin reduces the area under the plasma-chloroquine concentration–time curve by ∼ 30% [ | Unknown |
| Methotrexate | Antimetabolite and antifolate | Methotrexate peak concentrations are reduced 20% and its area under the concentration–time curve is reduced 28% with concomitant chloroquine use [ | Unknown |
| Praziquantel | Anthelmintic | Concomitant use of chloroquine reduces concentration–time curve of praziquantel 65% and peak concentrations 59% [ | WHO recommends inclusion of pregnant women in deworming campaigns with 40 mg/kg praziquantel [ |
Chloroquine pharmacokinetics and azithromycin pharmacokinetics among pregnant and nonpregnant women in Papua New Guinea.
| Chloroquine pharmacokinetic study | Azithromycin pharmacokinetic study | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pregnant women (n = 30) [95% CI] | Non-pregnant women (n = 30) [95% CI] | p | Pregnant women (n = 31) [95% CI] | Non-pregnant women (n = 29) [95% CI] | p | |
| CL/ | 32.0 [28.8 – 36.5] | 23.9 [21.3 – 26.3] | < 0.001 | |||
| CLM/ | 5.74 [5.17 – 6.55] | 4.29 [3.82 – 4.72] | < 0.001 | |||
| 3406 [2819 – 4919] | 2702 [2230 – 3535] | 0.007 | 647 [422 – 995] | 249 [157 – 363] | NS | |
| 3888 [3708 – 4104] | 3672 [3456 – 3888] | 0.034 | ||||
| 7147 [6721 – 9638] | 6707 [5843 – 7158] | 0.009 | 8355 [7460 – 8973] | 6875 [6115 – 7526] | 0.002 | |
| 0.88 [0.57 – 1.36] | 0.39 [0.24 – 0.56] | < 0.001 | ||||
| 266 [244 – 280] | 291 [272 – 313] | < 0.001 | 20.7 [18.3 – 22.8] | 18.8 [15.3 – 21] | NS | |
| 78.2 [74 – 82.5] | 77.1 [71.5 – 84.5] | NS | ||||
| AUC0 – ∞ | 35,750 (mg · h/litre) [31,343 – 39,729] | 47,892 (mg · h/litre) [43,486 – 53,746] | < 0.001 | 28,713 (μg h litre-1) [25,913 – 32,942] | 31,781 (μg h litre-1) [28,736 – 38,012] | NS |
Chloroquine pharmacokinetic study: all women received 450 mg base chloroquine for 3 days plus SP-IPTp.
Azithromycin pharmacokinetic study: women received either two 2 g doses azithromycin plus 450 mg base chloroquine for 3 days OR two 2 g doses azithromycin plus SP-IPTp.
AUC0 – ∞: Area under the curve; CL/F: Clearance from the first compartment/bioavailability; CLM/F: Metabolic clearance/bioavailability; NS: Not significant;
t1/2α: First distribution half-life; t1/2β: Elimination half-life; t1/2γ: Terminal half-life; V: Volume of distribution of the first compartment/bioavailability; V: Volume of distribution of the second compartment/bioavailability; V: Volume of distribution at steady state/bioavailability.
Drug summary
| Drug name (generic) | Azithromycin-chloroquine |
| Phase | Phase III |
| Indication | Intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy |
| Pharmacology description/mechanism of action | Azithromycin is a slow-acting macrolide that targets the 70S ribosomal subunit of the apical complex in susceptible microorganisms including malaria parasites Chloroquine is a rapidly absorbed 4-aminoquinoline that accumulates in digestive vacuoles, binds to hematin and prevents its expulsion from sensitive malaria parasites |
| Route of administration | Oral/Per os (PO) |
| Molecular formula | Azithromycin – C38H72N2O12 |
| Chemical structure | |
| Pivotal trial(s) |