TY - JOUR
T1 - Prevention of Increasing Rates of Treatment Failure by Combining Sulfadoxine-Pyrimethamine with Artesunate or Amodiaquine for the Sequential Treatment of Malaria
AU - Dorsey, Grant
AU - Vlahos, Jonathan
AU - Kamya, Moses R.
AU - Staedke, Sarah
AU - Rosenthal, Philip J.
PY - 2003/10/15
Y1 - 2003/10/15
N2 - Combination antimalarial therapy may delay the spread of drug resistance, but clinical data supporting this notion are limited. For 1 year, we studied Ugandan children who were treated for uncomplicated malaria with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP), SP + amodiaquine (AQ), or SP + artesunate (AS). We compared treatment responses and the prevalence of resistance-conferring mutations of new infections with those of recrudescent infections due to parasites that survived prior treatment. Recrudescent infections were associated with the selection of SP resistance-conferring mutations in all treatment groups, but responses to repeat therapy differed. Compared with initial treatments, treatment of recrudescent infections was associated with a higher rate of treatment failure (hazard ratio [HR], 2.44; P = .01), for the SP group, but with a lower rate of treatment failure (HR, 0.40; P = .08), for the SP + AS group. Treatment failure in the SP + AQ group was uncommon, limiting the analysis of recrudescent parasites. Our results suggest that the use of combination antimalarial therapy in Africa may slow the spread of drug-resistant malaria and prolong the therapeutic life span of available treatment regimens.
AB - Combination antimalarial therapy may delay the spread of drug resistance, but clinical data supporting this notion are limited. For 1 year, we studied Ugandan children who were treated for uncomplicated malaria with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP), SP + amodiaquine (AQ), or SP + artesunate (AS). We compared treatment responses and the prevalence of resistance-conferring mutations of new infections with those of recrudescent infections due to parasites that survived prior treatment. Recrudescent infections were associated with the selection of SP resistance-conferring mutations in all treatment groups, but responses to repeat therapy differed. Compared with initial treatments, treatment of recrudescent infections was associated with a higher rate of treatment failure (hazard ratio [HR], 2.44; P = .01), for the SP group, but with a lower rate of treatment failure (HR, 0.40; P = .08), for the SP + AS group. Treatment failure in the SP + AQ group was uncommon, limiting the analysis of recrudescent parasites. Our results suggest that the use of combination antimalarial therapy in Africa may slow the spread of drug-resistant malaria and prolong the therapeutic life span of available treatment regimens.
U2 - 10.1086/378523
DO - 10.1086/378523
M3 - Article
VL - 188
SP - 1231
EP - 1238
JO - Journal of Infectious Disease
JF - Journal of Infectious Disease
IS - 8
ER -