Back to Search Start Over

Weekly primaquine for radical cure of patients with Plasmodium vivax malaria and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency

Authors :
Dinglasan, RR
Taylor, WRJ
Meagher, N
Ley, B
Thriemer, K
Bancone, G
Satyagraha, A
Assefa, A
Chand, K
Chau, NH
Dhorda, M
Degaga, TS
Ekawati, LL
Hailu, A
Hasanzai, MA
Naddim, MN
Pasaribu, AP
Rahim, AG
Sutanto, I
Thanh, NV
Tuyet-Trinh, NT
Waithira, N
Woyessa, A
Dondorp, A
von Seidlein, L
Simpson, JA
White, NJ
Baird, JK
Day, NP
Price, RN
Dinglasan, RR
Taylor, WRJ
Meagher, N
Ley, B
Thriemer, K
Bancone, G
Satyagraha, A
Assefa, A
Chand, K
Chau, NH
Dhorda, M
Degaga, TS
Ekawati, LL
Hailu, A
Hasanzai, MA
Naddim, MN
Pasaribu, AP
Rahim, AG
Sutanto, I
Thanh, NV
Tuyet-Trinh, NT
Waithira, N
Woyessa, A
Dondorp, A
von Seidlein, L
Simpson, JA
White, NJ
Baird, JK
Day, NP
Price, RN
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization recommends that primaquine should be given once weekly for 8-weeks to patients with Plasmodium vivax malaria and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, but data on its antirelapse efficacy and safety are limited. METHODS: Within the context of a multicentre, randomised clinical trial of two primaquine regimens in P. vivax malaria, patients with G6PD deficiency were excluded and enrolled into a separate 12-month observational study. They were treated with a weekly dose of 0.75 mg/kg primaquine for 8 weeks (PQ8W) plus dihydroartemisinin piperaquine (Indonesia) or chloroquine (Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Vietnam). G6PD status was diagnosed using the fluorescent spot test and confirmed by genotyping for locally prevalent G6PD variants. The risk of P. vivax recurrence following PQ8W and the consequent haematological recovery were characterized in all patients and in patients with genotypically confirmed G6PD variants, and compared with the patients enrolled in the main randomised control trial. RESULTS: Between July 2014 and November 2017, 42 male and 8 female patients were enrolled in Afghanistan (6), Ethiopia (5), Indonesia (19), and Vietnam (20). G6PD deficiency was confirmed by genotyping in 31 patients: Viangchan (14), Mediterranean (4), 357A-G (3), Canton (2), Kaiping (2), and one each for A-, Chatham, Gaohe, Ludhiana, Orissa, and Vanua Lava. Two patients had recurrent P. vivax parasitaemia (days 68 and 207). The overall 12-month cumulative risk of recurrent P. vivax malaria was 5.1% (95% CI: 1.3-18.9) and the incidence rate of recurrence was 46.8 per 1000 person-years (95% CI: 11.7-187.1). The risk of P. vivax recurrence was lower in G6PD deficient patients treated with PQ8W compared to G6PD normal patients in all treatment arms of the randomised controlled trial. Two of the 26 confirmed hemizygous males had a significant fall in haemoglobin (>5g/dl) after the first dose but were able to complete their 8 week regi

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1426978118
Document Type :
Electronic Resource