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Quantifying the Evolution and Impact of Antimalarial Drug Resistance: Drug Use, Spread of Resistance, and Drug Failure over a 12-Year Period in Papua New Guinea
Auteur(s)
Nsanzabana, Christian
Hastings, Ian M.
Marfurt, Jutta
Müller, Ivo
Baea, Kay
Rare, Lawrence
Schapira, Allan
Felger, Ingrid
Smith, Thomas A.
Beck, Hans-Peter
Genton, Blaise
Date de parution
2010
In
The Journal of Infectious Diseases, Oxford University Press, 2010/201/3/435-443
Résumé
<i>Background</i>. Antimalarial use is a key factor driving drug resistance and reduced treatment effectiveness in <i>Plasmodium falciparum</i> malaria, but there are few formal, quantitative analyses of this process. <br> <i>Methods</i>. We analyzed drug usage, drug failure rates, and the frequencies of mutations and haplotypes known to be associated with drug resistance over a 12-year period (1991–2002) in a site in Papua New Guinea. This period included 2 successive treatment policies: amodiaquine (AQ) or chloroquine (CQ) from 1991 through 2000 and their subsequent replacement by sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) plus AQ or SP plus CQ. <br> <i>Results</i>. Drug use approximated 1 treatment per person-year and was associated with increasing frequencies of <i>pfcrt</i> and <i>pfmdr1</i> mutations and of treatment failure. The frequency of <i>pfdhfr</i> mutations also increased, especially after the change in treatment policy. Treatment failure rates multiplied by 3.5 between 1996 and 2000 but then decreased dramatically after treatment policy change. <br> <i>Conclusions</i>. With high levels of resistance to CQ, AQ, and SP, the deployment of the combination of both drugs appears to increase clinical effectiveness but does not decelerate growth of resistance. Our estimates of mutation and haplotype frequencies provide estimates of selection coefficients acting in this environment, which are key parameters for understanding the dynamics of resistance.
Identifiants
Type de publication
journal article