| Literature DB >> 30526594 |
Jeremy Burrows1, Hannah Slater2,3, Fiona Macintyre4, Sarah Rees5, Anna Thomas4, Fredros Okumu6,7,8, Rob Hooft van Huijsduijnen4, Stephan Duparc4, Timothy N C Wells4.
Abstract
Reaching the overall goal of eliminating malaria requires halting disease transmission. One approach to blocking transmission is to prevent passage of the parasite to a mosquito, by preventing formation or transmission of gametocytes. An alternative approach, pioneered in the veterinary field, is to use endectocides, which are molecules that render vertebrate blood meals toxic for the mosquito vector, also killing the parasite. Field studies and modelling suggest that reducing the lifespan of the mosquito may significantly reduce transmission, given the lengthy maturation process of the parasite. To guide the development of new endectocides, or the reformulation of existing molecules, it is important to construct a framework of the required attributes, commonly called the target candidate profile. Here, using a combination of insights from current endectocides, mathematical models of the malaria transmission dynamics, and known impacts of vector control, a target candidate profile (TCP-6) and a regulatory strategy are proposed for a transmission reducing agent. The parameters chosen can be used to assess the potential of a new medicine, independent of whether it has classical endectocide activity, reduces the insect and parasite lifespan or any combination of all three, thereby constituting an 'endectocidal transmission blocking' paradigm.Entities:
Keywords: Endectocides; Malaria; Plasmodium; Target product profile; Transmission blocking; Transmission reducing agent; target candidate profile
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30526594 PMCID: PMC6287360 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-018-2598-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
target candidate profile for a new endectocide
| TCP-6 criteria at human proof of concept | Minimum essential | Ideal |
|---|---|---|
| Dosing regimen | Oral, once monthly three daily doses of < 10 mg/kg | Oral, once monthly single dose < 2 mg/kg |
| Action and clinical parasite reduction ratio from single dose | Efficacy of a Hazard ratio at least 4 is delivered upon mosquito feeding 28 days post oral dose (for a use with SMC) | Rapid onset of action, within 12 h. Efficacy equal or higher than a hazard ratio of 4 is delivered upon mosquito feeding 30 days post oral dose |
| Susceptibility to loss of efficacy due to acquired resistance in mosquitoes | No fit, fertile insecticide resistant insects in early resistance generation studies, no increase in cuticle thickening or selection for P450s which would reduce susceptibility to other insecticides |
|
| Relative efficacy against mosquitoes highly resistant to current insecticides | Minimum activity on field | Activity on all four major |
| Drug–drug interactions | No unsurmountable risks with potential anti-malarial partners, especially those under consideration for SMC | No interactions with other anti-malarial, anti-retroviral or tuberculosis medicines |
| Safety | Safety margin > tenfold between therapeutic exposure and NOAEL in preclinical studies, and easily ‘monitorable’ adverse event or biomarker for human studies. | Safety margin > 50 fold and easily ‘monitorable’ adverse event. No reprotox safety signal in two animal species (‘Minimum’ for MDA, ‘Ideal’ for SMC). |
| Formulation | Simple and inexpensive to produce, not requiring proprietary methodology or kits; can readily be produced in endemic countries. | Simple and inexpensive to produce, not requiring proprietary methodology or kits; can readily be produced in endemic countries. No food effect. |
| Cost of active ingredient in final medicine | Similar to current anti-malarials: ≤ $0.5 for adults, $0.1 for infants under 2 years | Similar to older anti-malarials: < $0.25 for adults, $0.05 for infants under 2 years |
| Estimated stability of final product under Zone IVb conditions (30 °C 75% humidity), in final packaging | ≥ 2 years | ≥ 3–5 years |
TCP-6 criteria for moving a molecule forwards into Phase II
PK, pharmacokinetic; MTD, maximum tolerated dose, NOAEL, no-observed-adverse-effect-level; G6PD, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
Fig. 1Representative simulations in regions with differing transmission intensities. Four scenarios are considered. In blue, 80% coverage of SMC in under 5 year olds, with no TCP-6 compound and only SP–AQ; in red 80% coverage of SMC under 10 year olds with no TCP-6 compound and only SP–AQ; in dark blue 80% coverage of SMC and a TCP-6 compound in all children under 5; and in magenta 80% coverage of SMC and a TCP-6 compound in all children under 10. The clinical case incidence of symptomatic malaria on the Y-axis for the left-hand figures is the incidence in children 0–10 years of age. The PCR-measured prevalence on the Y-axis for the right-hand figures is in all age groups
Fig. 2Impact of a TCP-6 compound on mosquito survival, assuming that the compound can maintain a hazard ratio of 4 up until day 30. The model assumes that a mosquito lives for 50 days in the laboratory and for 10 days in the wild. The panel on the right shows the HRs (the ratio of the blue and red lines in the middle and right graphs) plotted over the time expected of the TCP6 lasting in the blood for 30 days
Fig. 3Percentage reduction in clinical incidence of symptomatic malaria in children < 10 years old (left panel) and annual PCR prevalence in all ages (right)
Fig. 4Screening cascade for identifying compounds for TCP-6 or ATSB. The bottom box identifies the suite of studies necessary for full evaluation of a potential TCP-6 candidate drug. If any properties require optimization, then medicinal chemistry would be driven using the A. stephensi SMFA to assess potency alongside any of the other relevant non-efficacy assays
Fig. 5Draft TCP-6 clinical development plan for a novel TCP-6 added to SP–AQ for seasonal malaria chemoprevention in asymptomatic subjects < 10 years of age. *West and Central Africa as required: Burkina Faso, Cameroun, Chad, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Niger, Nigeria, Mali, Senegal, Togo; **Excluding women of child-bearing potential; SAD, Single ascending dose study; SMFA, Standard membrane feeding assay; MAD, multiple ascending dose study; SP–AQ, sulfadoxine–pyrimethamine