Largest clinical trial confirms new drug for worldwide malaria treatment
November 7th, 2010 - 1:28 pm ICT by ANILondon, Nov 7 (ANI): The largest clinical trial ever conducted has concluded that the drug artesunate should now be the preferred treatment for the disease in both children and adults everywhere in the world.
Professor Nick White of the Wellcome Trust-Mahidol University-Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Programme in Bangkok, Thailand, and his colleagues conducted the trial called African Quinine v. Artesunate Malaria Trial (AQUAMAT).
Artesunate is derived from a Chinese herb called qinghao (Artemisia annua).
AQUAMAT found that treatment with artesunate reduced the number of deaths from severe malaria by 22.5percent compared with quinine. With artesunate treatment 8.5 percent of the patients died, compared to 10.9 percent with quinine.
Children treated with artesunate were also less likely to slip into a deeper coma or have seizures after the treatment was started. Severe hypoglycaemia - dangerously low blood sugar - was also less common in children treated with artesunate. In addition, artesunate was easy to administer, well tolerated, and proved very safe.
“Thanks to the development of the artemisinin compounds, we now have a safer and much more effective treatment. We recommend that artesunate should now replace quinine for the treatment of severe malaria in both children and adults everywhere in the world,” Lancet quoted White as saying.
“For those of us who treat malaria in Africa, this trial is a turning point. Finally we have a better treatment to offer to our malaria patients,” agreed Dr Olugbenga Mokuolu from the University of Ilorin in Nigeria.
“There are still many hurdles to overcome and we must be vigilant to protect against resistance to these new drugs and against a market in counterfeit drugs. But Professor White and colleagues have shown that we have the potential to save the lives of hundreds of thousands of children,” said Sir Mark Walport, Director of the Wellcome Trust, which supported the study. (ANI)
- Herbs used in Chinese medicine 'more effective against severe malaria' - Mar 16, 2011
- Malaria parasite developing drug resistance in Cambodia - Jul 30, 2009
- Natural compounds could pave way for novel anti-malaria drugs - Mar 15, 2011
- High dose of oxygen boosts natural cancer treatment - Apr 05, 2011
- Boosting availability of potent anti-malaria drug - Jan 18, 2012
- New genetic map to speed up plant breeding of medicinal herb - Jan 15, 2010
- Cost-effective, life-saving intervention for severe childhood malaria - Nov 30, 2010
- Drug-resistant Malaria spreads along Thai-Myanmar border - Apr 06, 2012
- Chinese scientist wins US award for malaria drug - Sep 15, 2011
- Canadian researchers announce breakthrough in malaria treatment - Mar 19, 2011
- 'Penicillin' breakthrough in cancer treatment? - Sep 15, 2010
- Novel anti-malarial drug candidate discovered - Sep 03, 2010
- Resistance to malaria drug rings alarm bells - Apr 08, 2012
- Now, a cheap and organic drug treatment for malaria - Aug 17, 2010
- New strategies reducing malaria deaths in Odisha (April 25 is World Malaria Day) - Apr 25, 2012
Tags: bangkok thailand, chinese herb, clinical trial, counterfeit drugs, lancet, low blood sugar, Mahidol University, malaria treatment, medicine research, new drugs, nick white, preferred treatment, professor nick, professor white, quinine, sir mark, tropical medicine, university of ilorin, university oxford, wellcome trust