| Literature DB >> 28738892 |
Aung Pyae Phyo1, Lorenz von Seidlein2.
Abstract
The spread of artemisinin and partner drug resistance through Asia requires changes in first-line therapy. The traditional modus has been the replacement of one first-line anti-malarial regimen with another. The number of anti-malarial drug candidates currently in development may have given false confidence in the expectation that resistance to artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) can be solved with a switch to the next anti-malarial drug regimen. A number of promising anti-malarial drug regimens did not succeed in becoming first-line drugs due to safety concerns or rapid development of resistance. Currently promising candidates for inclusion in first-line regimens, such as KAE 609, KAF 156, OZ 439, and OZ 277, have already triggered safety concerns or fears that point mutations could render the drugs inefficacious. An additional challenge for a new first-line drug is finding an appropriate partner drug. There is hope that none of the above-mentioned concerns will be substantiated in larger, upcoming trials. Meanwhile, combining already licensed anti-malarials may be a promising stop-gap measure. Practitioners in Vietnam have empirically started to add mefloquine to the current dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine. Practitioners in Africa could do worse than empirically combine already licensed co-artemether and amodiaquine when treatment with ACT no longer clears Plasmodium falciparum. Both combinations are currently undergoing trials.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28738892 PMCID: PMC5525298 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-017-1942-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Critical characteristics of four potential antimalarial drug candidates
| KAE609 | KAF156 | OZ439 | OZ277 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Potential partner drug? | Ferroquine | Solid dispersion formulation-lumefantrine | Piperaquine ferroquine | Piperaquine |
| Drug half-life (h) | 21 | 48–60 | 46–62 | 2–4 |
| Efficacy | PCt1/2 0.9 h | PCt1/2 3.5 h | PC1/2 = 4.4 (WT K13) PC1/2 = 5.5 (Mutant) | Median PCt = 24 h same as coartem |
| PCR-corrected ACPR on day 42 was under 50% with single dose piperaquine | PCR-corrected ACPR on day 42 was >98% in both groups | |||
| Transmission blocking | Reduction in stage 5 gametocyte in vitro and inhibit oocyst development in standard membrane feeding assay | Reduction in stage 5 gametocyte in vitro and inhibit oocyst development in standard membrane feeding assay | 7 patients with pre-treatment and 10 patients with post-treatment Pf gametocytes; one had up to day-6 | Day 7 and Day 14 carriage higher than coartem [ |
| Adverse event | Raised transaminase (3/21 patients) | Raised transaminase (30% of patients) | 12/82 patients increased CPK | 6.9% (49) got QTcF > 500 ms compared to 1.7% (6) in coartem |
| 7/82 patients increased transaminases | ||||
| 2/82 patients QTcF > 450 ms. 18/82 patients with prolongation of QTcF > 30 ms from baseline | ||||
| Resistance | SNP at PfATP4 gene can be selected in vitro after 4-months exposure to incremental increasing conc. of KAE | SNP at PfCARL gene can be selected in vitro after 4-months exposure to incremental increasing conc. of KAF | Slower PCt1/2 in K-13 mutation even though in vitro RSA suggested no difference | Not tested |
| MIC | 0.1 ng/ml | 4.1 ng/ml [ |
Conc., concentration; K13, PF3D7_1343700 kelch propeller domain; MIC, minimal inhibitory concentration; ng, nanogram; ml, millilitre; ms, millisecond; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; PCt, parasite clearance time; Pf, Plasmodium falciparum; PHEIC, Public Health Emergency of International Concern; RSA, ring-stage survival assay; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism; WT, wild type