1. Associations between Malaria-Preventive Regimens and Plasmodium falciparum Drug Resistance-Mediating Polymorphisms in Ugandan Pregnant Women
- Author
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Nayebare, Patience, Asua, Victor, Conrad, Melissa D, Kajubi, Richard, Kakuru, Abel, Nankabirwa, Joaniter I, Muhanguzi, Dennis, Dorsey, Grant, Kamya, Moses R, Nsobya, Sam, and Rosenthal, Philip J
- Subjects
Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Antimicrobial Resistance ,Infectious Diseases ,Genetics ,Clinical Research ,HIV/AIDS ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Rare Diseases ,Prevention ,Orphan Drug ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,Malaria ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Antimalarials ,Drug Combinations ,Drug Resistance ,Female ,Humans ,Malaria ,Falciparum ,Plasmodium falciparum ,Polymorphism ,Genetic ,Pregnancy ,Pregnant Women ,Pyrimethamine ,Sulfadoxine ,Uganda ,malaria ,intermittent preventive therapy ,dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine ,sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine ,Microbiology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Medical microbiology ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences - Abstract
Intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy (IPTp) with monthly sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) is recommended for malaria-endemic parts of Africa, but efficacy is compromised by resistance, and, in recent trials, dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DP) has shown better antimalarial protective efficacy. We utilized blood samples from a recent trial to evaluate selection by IPTp with DP or SP of Plasmodium falciparum genetic polymorphisms that alter susceptibility to these drugs. The prevalence of known genetic polymorphisms associated with altered drug susceptibility was determined in parasitemic samples, including 375 collected before IPTp drugs were administered, 125 randomly selected from those receiving SP, and 80 from those receiving DP. For women receiving DP, the prevalence of mixed/mutant sequences was greater in samples collected during IPTp than that in samples collected prior to the intervention for PfMDR1 N86Y (20.3% versus 3.9%; P
- Published
- 2020