| Literature DB >> 31477109 |
Deus S Ishengoma1, Queen Saidi2, Carol H Sibley3, Cally Roper4, Michael Alifrangis5,6.
Abstract
Parasite resistance against anti-malarial drugs is a major threat to the ongoing malaria control and elimination strategies. This is especially true since resistance to the currently recommended artemisinins and partner drugs has been confirmed in South East Asia (SEA) and new anti-malarial compounds are not expected to be available in the near future. Spread from SEA or independent emergence of artemisinin resistance in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) could reverse the achievements in malaria control that have been attained in the past two decades and derail the ongoing elimination strategies. The current surveillance of clinical efficacy and resistance to anti-malarial drugs is based on efficacy trials to assess the clinical performance of anti-malarials, in vivo/ex vivo assessment of parasite susceptibility to anti-malarials and prevalence of known molecular markers of drug resistance. Whereas clinical efficacy trials are restricted by cost and the complex logistics of patient follow-up, molecular detection of genetic mutations associated with resistance or reduced susceptibility to anti-malarials is by contrast a simple and powerful tool for early detection and monitoring of the prevalence of resistant parasites at population level. This provides needed information before clinical failure emerges, allowing policy makers to anticipate problems and respond. The various methods previously used in detection of molecular markers of drug resistance share some limitations: low-throughput, and high costs per sample and demanding infrastructure. However, recent technological advances including next-generation sequencing (NGS) methodologies promise greatly increased throughput and reduced costs, essentially providing unprecedented potential to address different research and operational questions of relevance for drug policy. This review assesses the potential role of NGS to provide comprehensive information that could guide drug policies in malaria endemic countries and looks at the foreseeable challenges facing the establishment of NGS approaches for routine surveillance of parasite resistance to anti-malarials in SSA.Entities:
Keywords: Drug resistance; Malaria; Next-generation sequencing; Plasmodium falciparum; Sub-Saharan Africa
Year: 2019 PMID: 31477109 PMCID: PMC6719357 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-019-2853-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Main molecular markers associated with reduced response to different anti-malarial drugs
| Anti-malarial drugs | Genes involved | Specific mutations | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Artemisinins | |||
| Artemisinin and its derivatives |
| Confirmed/validated SNPs in the propeller domaina | [ |
| 4-Amino quinolones | |||
| Amodiaquine |
| [ | |
| [ | |||
| Chloroquine | [ | ||
| [ | |||
| Mefloquine |
| Increased | [ |
| Piperaquine | Plasmepsin 2/ | Increased pm2 CNV | [ |
| [ | |||
| Antifolate drugs | |||
| Pyrimethamine |
|
| [ |
| Sulfadoxine |
|
| [ |
| Others | |||
| Lumefantrine |
| [ | |
| [ | |||
pfk13 , Plasmodium falciparum kelch 13 gene; pfcrt , P. falciparum chloroquine resistance transporter; pfmdr1 , P. falciparum multidrug resistance 1; pfdhfr, P. falciparum dihydrofolate reductase; pfdhps, P. falciparum dihydropteroate synthase; CNV, copy number variants
aSNPs at codons F446, N458, M476, Y493, R539, I543 P553L, R561H and C580 have been validated as markers associated with partial resistance to artemisinins whiles others have been reported as confirmed markers [6, 45–47]