WHO issues new malaria treatment guidelines
The WHO has asked pharmaceuticals to end the marketing of single-drug artemisinin malaria medicines, and instead market artemisinin combination therapies only.
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The World Health Organization has asked pharmaceutical companies to end the marketing and sale of single-drug artemisinin malaria medicines, in order to prevent malaria parasites from developing resistance to the drug, and instead market artemisinin combination therapies only.The use of artemisinin monotherapy hastens development of resistance by weakening but not killing the parasite, according to the WHO new malaria treatment guidelines. It is critical that artemisinins be used correctly. When used correctly in combination with other anti-malarial drugs in Artemisinin Combination Therapies (ACTs), artemisinin is nearly 95 percent effective in curing malaria and the parasite is highly unlikely to become drug-resistant. Malaria, caused by a one-celled parasite carried by mosquitoes called Plasmodium, kills at least a million people every year and makes 300 million people seriously ill. According to its new treatment guidelines, falciparum malaria must be treated with ACTs and not by artemisinin alone or any other monotherapy. The director of WHO's malaria department said that no treatment failures due to artemisinin drug resistance have been documented yet, but the situation bears watching closely. In Thailand, sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine was initially almost 100 percent effective in curing malaria when introduced in 1977, but within five years was curing only 10 percent of cases due to drug resistance. The once-popular chloroquine has lost its effectiveness in almost every part of the world and resistance to atovaquone developed within one year of introduction in 1997. WHO urged malaria researchers and the pharmaceutical industry to quickly invest in development of the next generation of anti-malarial drugs. The biggest concern right now is to treat patients with safe and effective medication and to avoid the emergence of drug resistance. If we lose ACTs, we'll no longer have a cure for malaria and it will probably be at least ten years before a new one can be discovered.
WHO,
January 2006
January 2006
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