| Literature DB >> 23170193 |
Francesco Castelli1, Lina Rachele Tomasoni, Alberto Matteelli.
Abstract
Malaria still claims a heavy toll of deaths and disabilities even at the beginning of the third millennium. The inappropriate sequential use of drug monotherapy in the past has facilitated the spread of drug-resistant P. falciparum, and to a lesser extend P. vivax, strains in most of the malaria endemic areas, rendering most anti-malarial ineffective. In the last decade, a new combination strategy based on artemisinin derivatives (ACT) has become the standard of treatment for most P. falciparum malaria infections. This strategy could prevent the selection of resistant strains by rapidly decreasing the parasitic burden (by the artemisinin derivative, mostly artesunate) and exposing the residual parasite to effective concentrations of the partner drug. The widespread use of this strategy is somehow constrained by cost and by the inappropriate use of artemisinin, with possible impact on resistance, as already sporadically observed in South East Asia. Parenteral artesunate has now become the standard of care for severe malaria, even if quinine still retains its value in case artesunate is not immediately available. The appropriateness of pre-referral use of suppository artesunate is under close monitoring, while waiting for an effective anti-malarial vaccine to be made available.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23170193 PMCID: PMC3499999 DOI: 10.4084/MJHID.2012.064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediterr J Hematol Infect Dis ISSN: 2035-3006 Impact factor: 2.576
Recommended regimens for the treatment of uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria (various sources) §
| Table 1A: First line regimens | ||||||
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| Compound (not exhaustive) | Manufacturers (not exhaustive) | Formulations | Dosage (adult) | Dosage (child) | Notes | Pregnancy |
| Arthemether-lumefantrine (Riamet ® - Coartem ®) | Novartis/Chinese Academy of Medical Military Sciences/MMV | Tablet (adult) and Dispersible (child): 20mg/120 mg | 4 tablets for 6 doses (0-8-24-36-48-60h) | 5–14 kg: 1 for 6 doses | With food Reduced efficacy in Cambodia and border regions of Thailand | II and III trim (I trim only if no alternative regimens) |
| Dihydroartemisi nin–piperaquine (Eurartesim ®) | Sigma-Tau/MMV/Pfizer | Tablet (adult): 320/40 mg | 36–74kg: 3 tablets | 5–7 kg: ½ tablets | Fasting | II and III trim (I trim only if no alternative regimens) |
| Artesunate–amodiaquine (Coarsucam ®) | Sanofi-Aventis/DNDi/MMV) | Dispersible tablet: | >36 kg | 4.5–9 kg: 25/67.5 mg | Not with high fatty food | only if no alternative regimens |
| Artesunate–mefloquine (Artequin ®, Mefliam-plus®) | Mepha, ASMQ; Farmanguinhos/ DNDi/Cipla | Crushed tablet: | 200/440mg | 5–8 kg: 25/55mg | With food | II and III trim (I trim only if no alternative regimens) |
| Artesunate–sulfadoxine–pyrimethamine (Altinate ®, Larinate ®, Artescope ®) | Allenge, Intima, Guilin | Tablets, various co-formulations | Artesunate 4 mg/kg/day for 3 days | II and III trim | ||
| Atovaquone-proguanil (Malarone ®) | GlaxoSmithKline | Tablet (adult): 250/100 mg | 4 tablets | 5–8kg: 1 tablet 62.5/25 | With fatty meal. Use for travellers | Only if no alternative regimens available |
| Table 1B: First line regimens (various sources) | ||||||
| Compound (not exhaustive) | Manufacturers (not exhaustive) | Formulations | Dosage (adult) | Dosage (child) | Notes | Pregnancy |
| Quinine | 10mg/kg thrice daily | 10mg/kg thrice daily | Off-label use | OK | ||
| Quinine | 10mg/kg thrice daily | Contraindicated if <8 years | Off-label use | Controindicated | ||
| Mefloquine (Lariam ®, Mephaquin ® or Mefliam ®) | Roche, Mepha, Cipla | Tablet: 250mg | 45–60kg: 5 tablets (3+2) | 20–25mg/kg divided in 1–3 doses 6 hours apart: | With food Not suitable for SE-Asia | II and III trim; I trim only if no alternative regimens |
: please refer to drug package instruction before use
Dosages are for Quinine dihydrocloride. Equivalent doses for available quinine salts are as follow: quinine base 100 mg= quinine bisulfate 169 mg= quinine dihydrochloride 122 mg= quinine hydrochloride 111 mg=quinine sulfate 121 mg=quinine gluconate 160 mg.
Conditions defining severe malaria case in plasmodium infection (ref: 3). Severe malaria is defined, in the absence of other obvious cause, when P. falciparum asexual parasitaemia is accompanied by one or more of the following clinical or laboratory features.
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impaired consciousness or unrousable coma prostration, i.e. generalized weakness so that the patient is unable to walk or sit up without assistance failure to feed multiple convulsions – more than two episodes in 24 h deep breathing, respiratory distress (acidotic breathing) circulatory collapse or shock, systolic blood pressure < 70 mm Hg in adults and < 50 mm Hg in children clinical jaundice plus evidence of other vital organ dysfunction haemoglobinuria abnormal spontaneous bleeding pulmonary oedema (radiological) |
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hypoglycaemia (blood glucose < 2.2 mmol/l or < 40 mg/dl) metabolic acidosis (plasma bicarbonate < 15 mmol/l) severe normocytic anaemia (Hb < 5 g/dl, packed cell volume < 15%) haemoglobinuria hyperparasitaemia (> 2% or 100 000/μl in low transmission areas or > 5% or 250 000/μl in high stable malaria transmission areas) hyperlactataemia (lactate > 5 mmol/l) renal impairment (serum creatinine > 265 μmol/l). |
Treatment of severe malaria §
| Dosage / body weight | Notes | ||
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| Parenteral Drug | |||
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| i.v. Artesunate | 2.4 mg/kg at 0,12,24 then once a day | Available as single-dose vial containing drug as a sterile dry-filled powder and a single-dose vial of a buffer solution to be reconstituted in a clear colorless 10 mg per mL solution. Adding 5 ml of normal saline solution it can be administered direct i.v. over 1 to 2 minutes into an established i.v. line. | |
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| i.v. Quinine | 20 mg*/kg (loading dose) then 10 mg/kg at 8-h intervals | contra-indicated if previous blackwater fever or quinine hypersensitivity or cardiac arrhythmia are known | |
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| Pre-referral drugs | |||
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| Suppository ** artesunate | 5 to 8 kg | 1supp. 50 mg | given once and followed as soon as possible by parenteral therapy |
| 9 to 19 kg | 1supp.100 mg | ||
| 20 to 29 kg | 2supp 100 mg | ||
| 30 to 39 kg | 3supp 100 mg | ||
| 40 to 59 kg | 1 supp 400 mg | ||
| 60 to 80 kg | 2 supp 400 mg | ||
| >80 kg | 3 supp 400 mg | ||
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| i.m. Quinine | 10 mg/kg | Dilute 300 mg quinine (usually corresponding to 1 ml) into 5ml of sterile water for injection or saline (not dextrose) in the same syringe, that now contains 50mg quinine/ml | |
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| i.m. Artemether | 3.2mg/kg | ||
: please refer to drug package instruction before use
Parenteral antimalarials should be administered for a minimum of 24 h, once started. When parasitemia has decreased to less than 1% and patient can tolerate oral medication, treatment should be completed by giving a complete course of: (i) artemether plus lumefantrine, (ii) artesunate plus amodiaquine, (iii) dihydroartemisinin plus piperaquine, (iv) artesunate plus sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, (v) artesunate plus clindamycin or doxycycline, (vi) quinine plus clindamycin or doxycycline