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Albendazole and antibiotics synergize to deliver short-course anti

Authors :
Joseph D, Turner
Raman, Sharma
Ghaith, Al Jayoussi
Hayley E, Tyrer
Joanne, Gamble
Laura, Hayward
Richard S, Priestley
Emma A, Murphy
Jill, Davies
David, Waterhouse
Darren A N, Cook
Rachel H, Clare
Andrew, Cassidy
Andrew, Steven
Kelly L, Johnston
John, McCall
Louise, Ford
Janet, Hemingway
Stephen A, Ward
Mark J, Taylor
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Significance Filarial nematode infections, caused by Wuchereria bancrofti, Brugia malayi (elephantiasis), and Onchocerca volvulus (river blindness) infect 150 million of the world’s poorest populations and cause profound disability. Standard treatments require repetitive, long-term, mass drug administrations and have failed to interrupted transmission in certain sub-Saharan African regions. A drug cure using doxycycline, which targets the essential filarial endosymbiont Wolbachia, is clinically effective but programmatically challenging to implement due to long treatment durations and contraindications. Here we provide proof-of-concept of a radical improvement of targeting Wolbachia via identification of drug synergy between the anthelmintic albendazole and antibiotics. This synergy enables the shortening of treatment duration of macrofilaricidal anti-Wolbachia based treatments from 4 wk to 7 d with registered drugs ready for clinical testing.<br />Elimination of filariasis requires a macrofilaricide treatment that can be delivered within a 7-day period. Here we have identified a synergy between the anthelmintic albendazole (ABZ) and drugs depleting the filarial endosymbiont Wolbachia, a proven macrofilaricide target, which reduces treatment from several weeks to 7 days in preclinical models. ABZ had negligible effects on Wolbachia but synergized with minocycline or rifampicin (RIF) to deplete symbionts, block embryogenesis, and stop microfilariae production. Greater than 99% Wolbachia depletion following 7-day combination of RIF+ABZ also led to accelerated macrofilaricidal activity. Thus, we provide preclinical proof-of-concept of treatment shortening using antibiotic+ABZ combinations to deliver anti-Wolbachia sterilizing and macrofilaricidal effects. Our data are of immediate public health importance as RIF+ABZ are registered drugs and thus immediately implementable to deliver a 1-wk macrofilaricide. They also suggest that novel, more potent anti-Wolbachia drugs under development may be capable of delivering further treatment shortening, to days rather than weeks, if combined with benzimidazoles.

Details

ISSN :
10916490
Volume :
114
Issue :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........2abaa5c2354515e7f4e3a9978e35c578