| Literature DB >> 34578153 |
Isaline Renard1, Choukri Ben Mamoun1.
Abstract
Babesiosis is an emerging tick-borne disease caused by apicomplexan parasites of the genus Babesia. With its increasing incidence worldwide and the risk of human-to-human transmission through blood transfusion, babesiosis is becoming a rising public health concern. The current arsenal for the treatment of human babesiosis is limited and consists of combinations of atovaquone and azithromycin or clindamycin and quinine. These combination therapies were not designed based on biological criteria unique to Babesia parasites, but were rather repurposed based on their well-established efficacy against other apicomplexan parasites. However, these compounds are associated with mild or severe adverse events and a rapid emergence of drug resistance, thus highlighting the need for new therapeutic strategies that are specifically tailored to Babesia parasites. Herein, we review ongoing babesiosis therapeutic and management strategies and their limitations, and further review current efforts to develop new, effective, and safer therapies for the treatment of this disease.Entities:
Keywords: Babesia duncani; Babesia microti; atovaquone; babesiosis; endochin-like quinolones (ELQs); parasite; therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34578153 PMCID: PMC8469882 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens10091120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1Cycle of transmission of the most common Babesia species, B. microti. During a blood meal, an infected tick introduces merozoites into the host (mouse or deer, for example). Free merozoites enter red blood cells and undergo asexual replication. While in the blood, some parasites differentiate into male and female gametocytes (not morphologically recognizable by light microscopy). These gametocytes are then taken up by a tick during a blood meal and differentiate into gametes. While in the gut, gametes fuse to form a zygote, that will subsequently undergo meiotic and several mitotic divisions to form sporozoites that are then transmitted to a mammalian host. Humans are typically accidental hosts and become infected through the bite of an infected tick. Human to human transmission is also possible via blood transfusion.
Figure 2Schematic representation of a Babesia-infected red blood cell and sites of action of some approved and experimental drugs. Azithromycin and clindamycin target the apicoplast; atovaquone and ELQs target the mitochondrion. A: apicoplast, C: conoid + polar rings, DG: dense granule, ER: endoplasmic reticulum, G: Golgi apparatus, M: mitochondrion, MN: microneme, PPM: parasite plasma membrane and R: rhoptry.
Figure 3Proposed mechanism of action of atovaquone and endochin-like quinolones in Babesia mitochondrion. (a) Schematic representation the mitochondrial electron transfer chain. (b) Schematic representation of the parasite bc complex with proposed mode of action of atovaquone and ELQs.
Reported efficacy of atovaquone, azithromycin, clindamycin and quinine in animal models of babesiosis.
| Drug | Treatment Regimen | Model | Effect | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atovaquone | 20 mg/kg (p.o.), 5 d | ~5.7 × reduction in peak parasitemia. | [ | |
| 25 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | 77% suppression of parasitemia at DPI 9. | [ | ||
| 50 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | 87% suppression of parasitemia at DPI 9. | [ | ||
| 100 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | 93% suppression of parasitemia at DPI 9. | [ | ||
| 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | Parasitemia clearance followed by recrudescence by D5-9 post-treatment. | [ | ||
| 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 10 d | Parasitemia clearance followed by recrudescence by D14 post-treatment. | [ | ||
| 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 10 d | Parasitemia clearance followed by recrudescence by D10 post-treatment. 80% survival. | [ | ||
| Azithromycin | 25 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | 75% suppression of parasitemia at DPI 9. | [ | |
| 50 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | 96% suppression of parasitemia at DPI 9. | [ | ||
| 100 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | 95% suppression of parasitemia at DPI 9. | [ | ||
| 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| 50 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| Clindamycin | 300 mg/kg (p.o.), 5d | 9.4% suppression of parasitemia at DPI 9. | [ | |
| 150 mg/kg (i.m.), 8d | ~2× reduction in peak parasitemia. | [ | ||
| 150 mg/kg (p.o.), 8d | ~2× reduction in peak parasitemia. | [ | ||
| 500 mg/kg (i.p.), 5d | ~3.2× reduction in peak parasitemia. | [ | ||
| 25 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| 50 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| 100 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| 50 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| Quinine | 125 mg/kg (s.c.), 8d | No effect. | [ | |
| 250 mg/kg (p.o.), 8d | No effect. | [ | ||
| 25 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| 50 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| 100 mg/kg (p.o.), 4 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| 50 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | No effect. | [ | ||
| 100 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | No effect. | [ |
Current in vitro and in vivo systems available for B. microti, B. divergens and B. duncani propagation.
| In Vitro System | In Vivo Model | |
|---|---|---|
|
| Short-term ex vivo system [ | Mice [ |
|
| Continuous in vitro culture system in human RBCs [ | Gerbils [ |
|
| Continuous in vitro culture system in hamster [ | Mice [ |
Preclinical evaluation of promising new therapeutics for the treatment of human babesiosis: tafenoquine, clofazimine and endochin-like quinolones (ELQs).
| Drug | Treatment Regimen | Model | Effect | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ELQ-271 | 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | Parasitemia clearance followed by recrudescence by D12 post-treatment. | [ | |
| ELQ-316 | 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | Parasitemia clearance followed by recrudescence by D12 post-treatment. | [ | |
| ELQ-334 | 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | Parasitemia clearance followed by recrudescence by D16 post-treatment. | [ | |
| ELQ-334 + Atovaquone | 10 + 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | Parasitemia clearance throughout experiment. | [ | |
| ELQ-502 | 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 5 d | Parasitemia clearance followed by recrudescence by D17 post-treatment. | [ | |
| 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 10 d | Parasitemia clearance throughout study (DPI 91). | [ | ||
| 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 10 d | Parasitemia clearance throughout study (DPI 91). 100% survival. | [ | ||
| ELQ-502 + Atovaquone | 10 + 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 10 d | Parasitemia clearance throughout study (DPI 91). | [ | |
| 10 + 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 10 d | Parasitemia clearance throughout study (DPI 91). 100% survival | [ | ||
| Tafenoquine | 52 mg/kg (i.m.), 4 d (b.i.d.) | 100% suppression of parasitemia at D3 post-treatment. Reinfection of clean hamster negative. | [ | |
| 13 mg/kg (i.m.), 4 d (b.i.d.) | 99% suppression of parasitemia at D3 post-treatment. | [ | ||
| 3.25 mg/kg (i.m.), 4 d (b.i.d.) | 91% suppression of parasitemia at D3 post-treatment. | [ | ||
| 52 mg/kg (i.m.), 2 d (b.i.d.) | 99% suppression of parasitemia at D3 post-treatment. | [ | ||
| 20 mg/kg (p.o.), 1 d | Parasitemia clearance followed by recrudescence by D37 post-treatment. | [ | ||
| 25 mg/kg (p.o.), 1 d, + 12.5 mg/kg (p.o.), 1 d (4 d after 1st dose) | Parasitemia clear through D28 post-treatment. Reinfection of “clean” mice positive. | [ | ||
| 10 mg/kg (p.o.), 3 d | ~5.6× reduction in peak parasitemia. | [ | ||
| Clofazimine | 20 mg/kg (p.o.), 52 d | Parasitemia clear through DPI 90 (smear + PCR negative). | [ | |
| 20 mg/kg (p.o.), 7 d | Parasitemia clearance followed by recrudescence on DPI 26, unresponsive to a 2nd course of clofazimine 20 mg/kg (p.o.) (14 d). | [ |