Characterizing Blood-Stage Antimalarial Drug MIC Values <i>In Vivo</i> Using Reinfection Patterns
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 62(7)
Article 2018 English
Authors
JW
James A Watson
CC
Cindy S. Chu
JT
Joel Tärning
Abstract
1 min read
The MIC is an essential quantitative measure of the asexual blood-stage effect of an antimalarial drug. In areas of high malaria transmission, and thus frequent individual infection, patients who are treated with slowly eliminated antimalarials become reinfected as drug concentrations decline. In the frequent relapse forms of Plasmodium vivax and in Plasmodium ovale malaria, recurrent infection occurs from relapses which begin to emerge from the liver approximately 2 weeks after the primary illness. An important determinant of the interval from starting treatment of a symptomatic infection to the patency of these recurrent infections is the in vivo concentration-response relationship and thus the in vivo MIC. Using mechanistic knowledge of parasite asexual replication and the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of the antimalarial drugs, a generative statistical model was derived which relates the concentration-response relationship to time of reinfection patency. This model was used to estimate the in vivo MIC of chloroquine in the treatment of Plasmodium vivax malaria.
Tran Tinh Hien, Sir Nicholas White, Thuy-Nhien Nguyen, Nhu Thi Hoa, Phung Duc Thuan, Joel Tärning, François Nosten, Baldur Magnusson, Jay Prakash Jain, Kamal Hamed
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