| Literature DB >> 26429335 |
Abstract
The discovery and development of the artemisinin class of antimalarial drugs is one of the great recent success stories of global health. However, after at least two decades of successful use, resistance has finally emerged and appears to be spreading rapidly throughout South-East Asia in spite of our best efforts at containment. If this were also to occur in Africa, it would have disastrous implications for the continent subject to the world's greatest burden of Plasmodium falciparum. The earliest indications of incipient artemisinin resistance may be a slowing of the rate at which parasites are cleared from the blood following treatment. The Worldwide Antimalarial Resistance Network have analysed data from 29,493 patients from 84 clinical trials in order to define the nature and determinants of early parasite clearance following artemisinin-based treatment in African populations. In doing so, they lay the foundation for systems intended to enable the earliest possible detection of emerging artemisinin resistance in Africa. Please see related article: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7015/13/212.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26429335 PMCID: PMC4591708 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-015-0486-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Relationship between early parasite clearance and drug resistance. This hypothetical example shows how the parasite clearance curve might change as drug resistance progressively compromises an artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT). Parasite clearance curves are shown for fully sensitive (blue), early resistance (green), established resistance (orange), and advanced resistance (red) scenarios. The earliest event in the progression of resistance is delayed early parasite clearance – but drug activity may still be sufficient to clear the total body parasite burden and achieve cure. As resistance becomes established, initial parasite killing may be sufficient for parasitemia to fall below the threshold of microscopic detectability (dashed line) but not to eliminate the entire body parasite burden – leading to recrudescence and late treatment failure. Complete failure to clear parasites (early treatment failure) will only occur once resistance to both drugs in an ACT combination has become very advanced
Fig. 2The parasite positivity rate (PPR) as a parasite clearance metric. The PPR at day 3 is defined by the proportion of a population with detectable parasitemia 3 days following treatment initiation. Therefore, for each individual, it reflects a binary outcome according to whether the X-intercept of the parasite clearance curve (also defined as the parasite clearance time) occurs before or after day 3 (dashed line). Whether this occurs or not will depend on the Y intercept (P: the parasite density at treatment commencement) and the gradient of the parasite clearance curve (k: the rate at which parasites are cleared). k will be determined by intrinsic parasite sensitivity (and therefore decrease when drug resistance develops) but may also be affected by pharmacological (e.g. pharmacokinetic variability) and host factors (acquired malaria-specific immunity will augment parasite killing and therefore increase the gradient)