Literature DB >> 9140488

The pharmacokinetics of chloroquine in healthy and Plasmodium chabaudi-infected mice: implications for chronotherapy.

G Cambie1, F Verdier, C Gaudebout, F Clavier, H Ginsburg.   

Abstract

The schizogony of malarial parasite is a typical cyclic phenomenon where the different stages of parasite development appear at regular time intervals. Each of the stages is specifically sensitive to different antimalarial drugs. Knowledge of the details of the cycle, drug susceptibility and the pharmacokinetics of drugs, could allow the improvement of drug action by the chronotherapeutic approach: treatment at the time of appearance of the drug sensitive stage with a drug that displays rapid pharmacokinetics. Since murine malarias serve as preferable models for in vivo drug testing, the pharmacokinetics of subcutaneously (sc) administered chloroquine (CQ) were tested in the whole blood of healthy mice and in animals slightly (1.5-3.5% parasitemia) or heavily infected (21-25% parasitemia) with Plasmodium chabaudi chabaudi. The half-time of absorption was around 5 min and almost independent of parasitemia. The apparent half-time of drug concentration decay was around 40 min in healthy animals, about 90 min at low parasitemia and about 410 min in heavy infection, indicating that the concentration of CQ is a typical spike, that is prolonged by asymptomatic disease, and considerably more by the active accumulation of CQ in infected cells. The latter is confirmed by the 3-fold higher peak blood [CQ] at the trophozoite stage and < 1.5-fold increase during schizogony. In conjunction with our previous experiments which showed that a single sc injection of 5 mg/kg CQ is sufficient to eliminate the drug susceptible mid-term trophozoite stage, the present results seem to justify to propose the chronotherapeutic approach for the treatment of malaria.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1994        PMID: 9140488     DOI: 10.1051/parasite/1994013219

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Parasite        ISSN: 1252-607X            Impact factor:   3.000


  8 in total

1.  Primary CD8+ T-cell response to soluble ovalbumin is improved by chloroquine treatment in vivo.

Authors:  Bruno Garulli; Maria G Stillitano; Vincenzo Barnaba; Maria R Castrucci
Journal:  Clin Vaccine Immunol       Date:  2008-08-27

2.  Pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and allometric scaling of chloroquine in a murine malaria model.

Authors:  Brioni R Moore; Madhu Page-Sharp; Jillian R Stoney; Kenneth F Ilett; Jeffrey D Jago; Kevin T Batty
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2011-06-06       Impact factor: 5.191

3.  Adaptive changes in Plasmodium transmission strategies following chloroquine chemotherapy.

Authors:  A G Buckling; L H Taylor; J M Carlton; A F Read
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  1997-04-22       Impact factor: 5.349

4.  Vaccination with live Plasmodium yoelii blood stage parasites under chloroquine cover induces cross-stage immunity against malaria liver stage.

Authors:  Elodie Belnoue; Tatiana Voza; Fabio T M Costa; Anne Charlotte Grüner; Marjorie Mauduit; Daniela Santoro Rosa; Nadya Depinay; Michèle Kayibanda; Ana Margarida Vigário; Dominique Mazier; Georges Snounou; Photini Sinnis; Laurent Rénia
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2008-12-15       Impact factor: 5.422

5.  Autophagy is dispensable for Kmt2a/Mll-Mllt3/Af9 AML maintenance and anti-leukemic effect of chloroquine.

Authors:  Xiaoyi Chen; Jason Clark; Mark Wunderlich; Cuiqing Fan; Ashley Davis; Song Chen; Jun-Lin Guan; James C Mulloy; Ashish Kumar; Yi Zheng
Journal:  Autophagy       Date:  2017-02-15       Impact factor: 16.016

Review 6.  Circadian rhythms in immunity and host-parasite interactions.

Authors:  Felicity K Hunter; Thomas D Butler; Julie E Gibbs
Journal:  Parasite Immunol       Date:  2022-02-16       Impact factor: 2.206

7.  Chloroquine modulates antitumor immune response by resetting tumor-associated macrophages toward M1 phenotype.

Authors:  Degao Chen; Jing Xie; Roland Fiskesund; Wenqian Dong; Xiaoyu Liang; Jiadi Lv; Xun Jin; Jinyan Liu; Siqi Mo; Tianzhen Zhang; Feiran Cheng; Yabo Zhou; Huafeng Zhang; Ke Tang; Jingwei Ma; Yuying Liu; Bo Huang
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-02-28       Impact factor: 14.919

8.  Validation of a chloroquine-induced cell death mechanism for clinical use against malaria.

Authors:  J-H Ch'ng; Y-Q Lee; S Y Gun; W-N Chia; Z-W Chang; L-K Wong; K T Batty; B Russell; F Nosten; L Renia; K S-W Tan
Journal:  Cell Death Dis       Date:  2014-06-26       Impact factor: 8.469

  8 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.