ORCID Profile
0000-0003-4878-5188
Current Organisation
University of St Andrews
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Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 19-08-2010
Abstract: Plasmodium knowlesi is a cause of symptomatic and potentially fatal infections in humans. There are no studies assessing the detailed parasitological response to treatment of knowlesi malaria infections in man and whether antimalarial resistance occurs. A prospective observational study of oral chloroquine and primaquine therapy was conducted in consecutive patients admitted to Kapit Hospital, Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo with PCR-confirmed single P. knowlesi infections. These patients were given oral chloroquine for three days, and at 24 hours oral primaquine was administered for two consecutive days, primarily as a gametocidal agent. Clinical and parasitological responses were recorded at 6-hourly intervals during the first 24 hours, daily until discharge and then weekly to day 28. Vivax malaria patients were studied as a comparator group. Of 96 knowlesi malaria patients who met the study criteria, 73 were recruited to an assessment of the acute response to treatment and 60 completed follow-up over 28 days. On admission, the mean parasite stage distributions were 49.5%, 41.5%, 4.0% and 5.6% for early trophozoites, late trophozoites, schizonts and gametocytes respectively. The median fever clearance time was 26.5 [inter-quartile range 16-34] hours. The mean times to 50% (PCT 50 ) and 90% (PCT 90 ) parasite clearance were 3.1 (95% confidence intervals [CI] 2.8-3.4) hours and 10.3 (9.4-11.4) hours. These were more rapid than in a group of 23 patients with vivax malaria 6.3 (5.3-7.8) hours and 20.9 (17.6-25.9) hours P = 0.02). It was difficult to assess the effect of primaquine on P. knowlesi parasites, due to the rapid anti-malarial properties of chloroquine and since primaquine was administered 24 hours after chloroquine. No P. knowlesi recrudescences or re-infections were detected by PCR. Chloroquine plus primaqine is an inexpensive and highly effective treatment for uncomplicated knowlesi malaria infections in humans and there is no evidence of drug resistance. Further studies using alternative anti-malarial drugs, including artemisinin derivatives, would be desirable to define optimal management strategies for P. knowlesi .
Publisher: Oxford University Press (OUP)
Date: 12-2003
DOI: 10.1086/379323
Abstract: The effectiveness of chloroquine or sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine administered with artesunate for treating uncomplicated falciparum malaria was assessed in 2 Vietnamese provinces where the sensitivity of parasites in vitro to conventional therapies had increased with the removal of drug pressure. In the province of Dac Lac, where potential malaria exposure begins at birth, 57 subjects (mean age, 9.6 years) were randomized to receive artesunate-chloroquine (group 1) or artesunate-sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (group 2). In the province of Binh Phuoc, 66 nonimmune workers and their relatives (mean age, 24.2 years) were similarly randomized. By day 28 of follow-up, >96% of Dac Lac patients and <52% of Binh Phuoc patients in group 1 and group 2 had an in vivo response that demonstrated sensitivity to therapy. PCR-confirmed cure rates paralleled in vivo results among patients in Binh Phuoc, but PCR results identified 9 (15.7%) of the Dac Lac patients as having experienced asymptomatic, submicroscopic recrudescences. In Dac Lac, pfcrt K76T was near fixation, but infection with parasites with this mutation predicted recrudescence among group 1 patients in Binh Phuoc. Common pfdhfr mutations did not predict outcome in group 2. The successful reintroduction of conventional therapies in combination with artesunate depends on epidemiological and/or parasitological factors.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 09-2000
DOI: 10.1046/J.1365-3024.2000.00324.X
Abstract: Considerable effort is directed at the development of a malaria vaccine that elicits antigen-specific T-cell responses against pre-erythrocytic antigens of Plasmodium falciparum. Genetic restriction of host T-cell responses and polymorphism of target epitopes on parasite antigens pose obstacles to the development of such a vaccine. Liver stage-specific antigen-1 (LSA-1) is a prime candidate vaccine antigen and five T-cell epitopes that are degenerately restricted by HLA molecules common in most populations have been identified on LSA-1. To define the extent of polymorphism within these T-cell epitopes, the N-terminal non-repetitive region of the LSA-1 gene from Malaysian P. falciparum field isolates was sequenced and compared with data of isolates from Brazil, Kenya and Papua New Guinea. Three of the T-cell epitopes were completely conserved while the remaining two were highly conserved in the isolates examined. Our findings underscore the potential of including these HLA-degenerate T-cell epitopes of LSA-1 in a subunit vaccine.
Publisher: Oxford University Press (OUP)
Date: 15-01-2008
DOI: 10.1086/524888
Publisher: Oxford University Press (OUP)
Date: 15-09-2009
DOI: 10.1086/605439
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 11-2003
DOI: 10.1016/S0020-7519(03)00199-1
Abstract: Thirty-two patients reporting to the Lundu District Hospital, Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo, with uncomplicated falciparum malaria were recruited into a multifaceted study to assess treatment response. Following combined chloroquine and sulphadoxine yrimethamine treatment the patients were followed for 28 days according to the World Health Organisation in vivo drug response protocol. The in vivo study revealed that 13 (41%) of the patients had a sensitive response to treatment, five (16%) cleared asexual stage parasites but had persistent gametocytes, 11 (34%) had RI type resistance and three (9%) had RII type resistance requiring quinine intervention before day 7 for parasite clearance. Although clinically insignificant, patients with persistent gametocytes, surviving chloroquine and sulphadoxine yrimethamine treatment during maturation, were placed in the reduced response to treatment group for analysis. Allelic typing detected 100% prevalence of the pfcrt K76T marker associated with chloroquine resistance and 78% prevalence of the pfdhfr NRNL haplotype associated with sulphadoxine yrimethamine treatment failure. High serum chloroquine levels and pfdhfr haplotypes with <or=2 point mutations were independently associated with a sensitive response to treatment. However four patients in the sensitive response group had both low serum chloroquine levels and the pfdhfr NRNL haplotype. A degree of immunity, consistent with malaria endemicity, may account for the apparently paradoxical presence of markers of drug resistance in the sensitive group.
Location: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Location: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Location: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Location: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
No related grants have been discovered for Janet Cox-Singh.