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The effects of serum lipids on the in vitro activity of lumefantrine and atovaquone against Plasmodium falciparum

Authors :
Chotivanich Kesinee
Mungthin Mathirut
Ruengweerayuth Ronnatrai
Udomsangpetch Rachanee
Dondorp Arjen M
Singhasivanon Pratap
Pukrittayakamee Sasithon
White Nicholas J
Source :
Malaria Journal, Vol 11, Iss 1, p 177 (2012)
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
BMC, 2012.

Abstract

Abstract Background Lumefantrine and atovaquone are highly lipophilic anti-malarial drugs. As a consequence absorption is increased when the drugs are taken together with a fatty meal, but the free fraction of active drug decreases in the presence of triglyceride-rich plasma lipoproteins. In this study, the consequences of lipidaemia on anti-malarial drug efficacy were assessed in vitro. Methods Serum was obtained from non-immune volunteers under fasting conditions and after ingestion of a high fat meal and used in standard Plasmodium falciparum in-vitro susceptibility assays. Anti-malarial drugs, including lumefantrine, atovaquone and chloroquine in five-fold dilutions (range 0.05 ng/ml – 1 ug/mL) were diluted in culture medium supplemented with fasting or post-prandial 10% donor serum. The in-vitro drug susceptibility of parasite isolates was determined using the 3H-hypoxanthine uptake inhibition method and expressed as the concentration which gave 50% inhibition of hypoxanthine uptake (IC50). Results Doubling plasma triglyceride concentrations (from 160 mg/dL to 320 mg/dL), resulted in an approximate doubling of the IC50 for lumefantrine (191 ng/mL to 465 ng/mL, P 50 for atovaquone (0.5 ng/mL to 12 ng/ml; P Conclusions Lipidaemia reduces the anti-malarial activity of lipophilic anti-malarial drugs. This is an important confounder in laboratory in vitro testing and it could have therapeutic relevance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14752875
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Malaria Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.338a212d3fb843cfaba25f2d0fef4ca9
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-177