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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, March 2002, p. 778-782, Vol. 46, No. 3
0066-4804/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.3.778-782.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University, Bangkok 10400,1 Sangklaburi Hospital, Sangklaburi, Kanchanaburi Province, Thailand,3 Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom2
Received 27 February 2001/ Returned for modification 18 August 2001/ Accepted 11 November 2001
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1% were randomized to receive a single oral dose of artesunate varying between 0 and 250 mg together with a curative dose of oral mefloquine. Acceleration of parasite clearance was used as the pharmacodynamic variable. An inhibitory sigmoidal maximum effect (Emax) pharmacodynamic model typical of a dose-response curve was fitted to the relationship between dose and shortening of parasite clearance time (PCT). The Emax was estimated as 28.6 oral h, and the 50% effective concentration was 1.6 mg/kg of body weight. These results imply that there is no reduction in PCTs with the use of single doses of artesunate higher than 2 mg/kg, and this therefore reflects the average lower limit of the maximally effective dose. |
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The combination of artesunate and mefloquine has recently become the treatment of choice for uncomplicated multidrug-resistant falciparum malaria in several countries in Southeast Asia. The total dose of artesunate used in current recommended regimens usually does not exceed 14 mg/kg of body weight. If used alone, artesunate needs to be given for 7 days for acceptable cure rates. These regimens were adapted from the early Chinese dose-finding studies and are not based on any pharmacokinetic or dynamic evidence.
There has been concern that the artemisinin derivatives induce specific central nervous system toxicity in animals. This has been described in primates, dogs, and rodents when the lipid-soluble artemisinin derivatives, artemether and arteether are given at high doses (>15 mg/kg/day) parenterally (2, 11, 12). The distribution of these pathological lesions is unusual in that it is specific for neurons in the pontine vestibular system. Toxic effects are also demonstrable in vitro in neuronal cell lines (19). Fortunately there has been no evidence of clinically demonstrable neurological damage in practice even in large studies which have enrolled more than 3,000 patients and in studies of brain stem auditory-evoked potentials in patients who have received multiple doses of artemisinin derivatives (18). Use of these drugs is increasing rapidly as it becomes accepted increasingly that artemisinin combinations offer the possibility of providing sustained high efficacy, preventing the emergence of drug resistance, and, in low-transmission areas, reducing malaria incidence (21). The affordability of these drugs is a major determinant of their potential global use. There is therefore an urgent need for dose optimization, both to reduce the potential for toxicity and to limit costs.
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Methods. Patients were enrolled into the study if they had microscopically confirmed infection with asexual forms of P. falciparum in peripheral blood smears (a parasitemia of >1%) but none of the World Health Organization criteria for the diagnosis of severe malaria and gave fully informed consent to the study procedure. Patients with a history of significant quinine (>2-g), artesunate, or mefloquine intake within the past 24 h; those with a history of hypersensitivity to any of the study drugs; pregnant women; and children under the age of 14 years were excluded. A quinine dipstick was used as described previously to exclude quinine intake (16).
Drug and sampling regimens. On admission a full history was taken, a full examination was performed, and the patient was weighed. A 20-gauge Teflon intravenous cannula was inserted into a forearm vein, and a baseline blood sample drawn for a quantitative parasite count and parasite staging. The parasite counts and axillary temperature were measured at 0, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, and 24 h posttreatment and then every 6 h until clearance of the parasites (defined as <1 parasite per 200 white blood cell nuclei on a thick film). The hematocrit was measured every 12 h. The microscopist was blinded to the treatment group.
Patients were randomized by use of a computer generated randomization table (in groups of 10) to receive a single oral dose of either 0, 25, 50, 75, 100, 150, 200, or 250 mg of artesunate (Guilin No. 1 Factory, Guangxi, People's Republic of China), i.e., from half a tablet to five tablets. The randomization code was revealed after patients had been admitted to the study, and the analysis was on an intention-to-treat basis. Patients were also given oral paracetamol (15 mg/kg), and after 1 h they were given a single oral dose of mefloquine (15 mg/kg; Mephaquine, Mepha, Basel, Switzerland). After 12 h they were given a further 10-mg/kg dose of mefloquine (total dose, 25 mg of base/kg). A single blood sample for a drug level was taken after 2 h. All patients were followed up for 28 days.
Pharmacodynamic measures of outcome. The proportional change in parasitemia was plotted against time, and the times taken to clear 50% of the parasitemia (PC50) and PC90 and the parasite clearance time (PCT) were measured graphically. Clinical response was measured by fever clearance, defined as the time for the axillary temperature to remain below 37.5°C. These values were compared between the mefloquine-only groups and the treatment groups, as well as using the drug dosage per kilogram of body weight as a continuous variable. Statistical analysis was performed using Statview 4.1 (1994 release; Abacus Concepts Inc.). Variables were normally distributed except for parasitemia, which was logarithmically transformed before analysis. Modeling of the pharmacodynamic data was done using WinNonlin (version 1.1; Statistical Consultants Inc.) using the inhibitory effect models with baseline effect parameters. The model was chosen a priori as likely to be the most appropriate. The minimization techniques were the same for each variable and the Aikake information criteria are shown for comparison in Table 3.
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TABLE 3. Modeled relationships between outcome measures and drug dose
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TABLE 1. Clinical and laboratory findings on admission
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/(C
+ EC
50) - E0 where E0 is the baseline effect, C is the dose or concentration, Emax is the maximum effect,
is the slope coefficient, and EC50 is the dose concentration producing 50% of the maximum effectwas fitted to these individual responses (Table 3). The effect (E) is shortening of parasite clearance. The relationships are shown in Fig. 2 to 4. There was considerable variance in the PC50s and PC90s with mefloquine alone or with low doses of artesunate. A better fit was obtained with the dose-PCT relationship. ED50s for the patient population were 0.7, 1.2, and 1.4 mg/kg for PC50, PC90, and PCT, respectively. However, the extrapolated lowest-dose estimates for Emax were similar for all three variables at approximately 2 mg/kg. |
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TABLE 2. Clinical and parasitological outcome measures and drug concentrations
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FIG.1. Relationship of oral artesunate dose to the 2-h concentration of DHA in plasma (r = 0.70).
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FIG. 2. Relationship of oral artesunate dose to PC50.
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FIG. 4. Relationship of oral artesunate dose to PCT.
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In an individual patient several factors determine the profile of parasite clearance. The stage and synchronicity of the infecting parasite population and the multiplication rate of sequestered mature stages (schizonts) determine the initial parasitemia time profile after drug administration (20). If the patient is admitted to hospital at a time when a significant proportion of the parasites are undergoing schizogony, then parasitemia will rise following antimalarial drug treatment as schizonts rupture and release merozoites, which then invade new erythrocytes to produce circulating ring stages. These stages can be seen by the microscopist and counted, whereas the sequestered stages are not seen and therefore are not counted. On the other hand, if the majority of parasites are approaching the latter half of the asexual cycle, then, in the case of P. falciparum, they will be expressing red blood cell surface adhesins and sequestering in the microcirculation. Parasitemia will fall. If the majority of the parasites in the blood are young rings, and a drug which has little effect on the ring stage is used in treatment (such as mefloquine, quinine, or sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine), then parasitemia will plateau and fall later as a result of sequestration (17, 20). The overall individual parasitemia profile thus represents a hybrid of these different processes, and a population of patients provides a series of very different parasitemia profiles. As a result there is considerable interindividual variance in parasite clearance profiles, although it is reasonable to assume that the distribution of parasite stages should be random in a patient population as there is no particular reason why a patient should present to hospital at one time in parasite development compared with another. Thus, even before attempting to assess the effect of the drug in vivo, there is considerable interpatient variance in the pharmacodynamic variables.
The effects of the antimalarial drug will be determined by absorption, distribution, and elimination, which also vary considerably between individuals, and also to some extent the susceptibility profile of the infecting malaria parasite population (or populations). In fact, in vitro profiles of sensitivity to artesunate and DHA for P. falciparum in Thailand show a relatively narrow range of sensitivities, and this is unlikely to be a significant source of variance (3). It is not known which pharmacokinetic parameter is the most important determinant of pharmacodynamic effect for the artemisinin compounds, i.e., whether peak concentration, area under the concentration-time curve, or time above a putative MIC is the most important. Further studies will be needed to characterize the concentration-effect relationships in vivo with these compounds.
In these studies a classic sigmoid dose-response relationship was evident with maximum effects using the three prospectively defined parameters at a dosage of 2 mg of artesunate/kg or more. The PC50 and PC90 times corresponded to a value less than or equal to the dosage interval, whereas PCTs were longer than the dosage interval and therefore potentially confounded by the subsequent mefloquine treatment. Nevertheless, the profiles produced with the three parameters were similar. This suggests that a dosage of 2 mg/kg would be the lowest to give maximum effects in an "average" patient. However, taking into account the considerable variance between individuals in both pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, a larger dose would be required to ensure that a maximum effect was obtained in all patients. This is particularly important for the prevention of the emergence of resistance. The artemisinin compounds have been extremely well tolerated, and to date there is no convincing evidence that they have significant toxicity. The current practice in combination treatments is to use a dose of 4 mg of artesunate/kg daily for 3 days (13). These data suggest that this dose offers a satisfactory margin of safety and would be unlikely to produce a submaximal antimalarial effect. Further studies should now be conducted to characterize the relationship between pharmacokinetic parameters and shortening of parasite clearance as an effect measure.
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FIG. 3. Relationship of oral artesunate dose to PC90.
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We are grateful to the Dean of the Faculty of Tropical Medicine at the time of this study, Tan Chongsuphajaisiddhi, for his support to and the medical and nursing staff of Sangklaburi Hospital for their help with this study. We also thank Impone Vangkonevilay, Jamie and Sarah Craig, and Juanita de Lope for their help with the clinical work. We are very grateful to V. Navaratnam and S. Mansor for conducting the drug assays and to Melba Gomes (WHO TDR) for supporting this.
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