Lower doses of an antimalarial drug are as effective as higher doses in reducing malaria transmission, according to a new study.
Primaquine is one of the few antimalarial drugs that targets the transmission stages of the malaria parasite, the gametocytes, and is therefore considered to be an important tool for malaria elimination.
However, standard doses of the drug cause reduced blood count in individuals with a deficiency in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) enzyme.
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But until now, the efficacy of lower doses of primaquine had not been formally evaluated.
The study, carried out in Jinja, Uganda, by London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine researchers treated G6PD-normal children with a conventional anti-malarial drug either on its own or with one of three different doses of primaquine.
The subsequent carriage of malaria gametocytes was monitored for two weeks and safety outcomes were monitored for four weeks.
Results showed that a dose of 0.4 mg/kg, approximately half of the previously recommended dose (0.75 mg/kg), was as effective at reducing the transmission potential of individuals with malaria.
These results establish that low dose primaquine is still effective and safe in a G6PD-normal population, and paves the way for using low-dose primaquine as a component of strategies to reduce malaria transmission and to stop the spread of drug-resistant malaria parasites.
The next step is to include the current WHO-recommended 0.25 mg/kg dose of primaquine in efficacy studies, and to test the safety of low dose primaquine in G6PD-deficient individuals, researchers said.
"Until now, the use of primaquine was limited because of safety concerns, but lower doses had never been tested formally," said lead author Dr Chi Eziefula, Wellcome Trust clinical research fellow.
"These findings, that efficacy is retained at a lower dose, imply that primaquine could play an important role in malaria elimination programmes. We now need to evaluate the safety of low-dose primaquine in G6PD-deficient individuals," Eziefula said.
The study was published in journal Lancet Infectious Diseases.