Showing posts with label Azithromycin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Azithromycin. Show all posts

Saturday, 11 February 2012

POVERTY: Yaws treatment study prompts WHO review

BANGKOK, 11 January 2012 (IRIN)

 Photo: World Health Organization
Boy with skin lesions from yaws

Findings that a one-time oral treatment to cure yaws, a neglected tropical disease, is as effective as the currently recommended penicillin injection have prompted the World Health Organization (WHO) to convene a meeting on how the disease may be wiped out.
"We may be closer now than we have been in decades," Kingsley Asiedu, a yaws expert with WHO's Department of Neglected Tropical Disease Control, told IRIN, calling the study on the bacterial skin disease, which leads to chronic disfiguration and disability in 10 percent of untreated cases, the most significant in half a century.
After a UN-led worldwide control programme cut infections from 50 million to 2.5 million in 1964 in 46 countries, the disease re-emerged in the 1970s when control efforts lagged, affecting an estimated 460,000 people - mostly children - in poor, tropical rural areas mainly in Africa and Asia, according to the most recent figures reported to WHO in 1995.
In 2010, the Lihir Medical Centre in Papua New Guinea (PNG), where the disease is still endemic, gave the one-time oral dose of the antibiotic azithromycin to about half of 250 infants and children from six months to 15 years infected with yaws.
Follow-up exams in 2011 showed the treatment was as effective as penicillin injections, which - unlike oral antibiotics - require trained health staff and equipment often scarce in areas most in need of treatment, wrote the researchers.
In a recent index of health workers' outreach by the NGO Save the Children, PNG ranked in the bottom 20 of 161 surveyed countries.
The meeting of yaws experts convened by WHO in Geneva from 5-7 March will "fully define how we are going to embark [on a new yaws treatment regimen] using azithromycin", said Asiedu.
WHO's yaws treatment guidelines date back to the 1960s and there have been no alternatives since, he added.
In Southeast Asia, WHO set the goal for regional eradication by 2012 in two remaining endemic countries - Indonesia and Timor-Leste. PNG, the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu have also reported cases.
Sub-Saharan Africa was the most heavily affected based on earlier estimates, but the "picture is not entirely clear now", said Asiedu. Cameroon, Central African Republic, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana, Sierra Leone and Togo have all reported cases.
More studies are needed to ensure resistance to azithromycin treatment does not develop, said David Mabey from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
While penicillin "has stood the test of time" - still as effective fighting the bacteria causing yaws after roughly 60 years - he noted mass azithromycin had only been used in developing countries for about a decade to treat trachoma, another bacterial disease prevalent in poor rural areas.
Discussions at the upcoming WHO meeting will include a measure to monitor antibiotic resistance, said Asiedu. "Antibiotic resistance is a risk in any treatment and we always have to be vigilant."
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=94621

Monday, 23 May 2011

MALARIA: in pregnancy

The intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp) with sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) has been a key component of the focused antenatal care package for nearly a decade, reducing the burden of low birthweight attributable to malaria in sub-Saharan Africa. However, SP has lost parasite sensitivity in many sub-Saharan locations during the same period, rendering its beneficial effect in IPTp debatable. Malaria transmission has also declined in some epidemiological settings. There is no evidence to suggest, however, that the risk of malaria in pregnancy without preventive measures has declined in the same locations. Thus, the urgency to identify efficacious drugs and/or new strategies to prevent malaria in pregnancy remains as great as ever. We summarise the results of recently published SP-IPTp studies from areas of high drug resistance and/or low malaria transmission. We also present the evidence for mefloquine and azithromycin-based combinations (ABCs), two leading drug options to replace SP in IPTp. We discuss optimal dosing for ABCs and their likely protection against several sexually transmitted and reproductive tract infections. We also summarise data from a diagnosis-based alternative to IPTp known as the intermittent screening and treatment (IST) for malaria. Clinical and operational research is urgently needed to compare birth outcomes achieved by IPTp with ABCs vs. IST using an efficacious antimalarial therapy



http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-3156.2011.02765.x/abstract




Sunday, 25 April 2010

Malaria in pregnancy: preventive medication

Pfizer and the Medicines for Malaria Venture have agreed to co-develop a fixed-dose combination therapy of azithromycin dihydrate (AZ) and chloroquine phosphate (CA) for the intermittent preventive treatment of Plasmodium falciparum malaria in pregnacy (IPTp). Phase III trials are expected to start in Africa later this year and include up to 5,000 participants.
The agreement between Pfizer and MMV builds on two years of informal collaborative research by the organizations together with the
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM).
Under the terms of the formal deal, Pfizer will seek marketing approval for the drug combination in selected malaria-endemic African countries and will work with the MMV to introduce the therapy in relevant territories. MMV will also provide support and advocacy on several levels including the development of a patient education campaign and recommendations on strategies for registration in malaria-endemic countries. The LSHTM will coordinate clinical trials of the AZ-CQ combination.
Pfizer says that WHO figures estimate some 30 million pregnant women in malaria-endemic African regions are at risk of the disease every year. “Pfizer believes that an affordable price for public sector sales of the medicine in endemic countries, if approved, is an important step towards increasing access and safe intermittent preventive treatment for pregnant women,” remarks Jean-Michel Halfon, president and GM of Pfizer’s emerging markets business.

http://www.genengnews.com/news/bnitem.aspx?name=80849261