The Phnom Penh Post

Genetic marker found for resistant parasites

- Yesenia Amaro

A GROUP of researcher­s have identified a genetic marker able to detect malaria parasites resistant to piperaquin­e – a drug that has been used in Cambodia since 2008 in combinatio­n with artemisini­n – according to a new study.

The findings of the study, published on Thursday in the medical journal the Lancet, pave the way for health officials to better monitor drug resistance and provide alternativ­e effective treatment.

Genetic markers that predict failure of artemisini­n combinatio­n therapy “are urgently needed to monitor the spread of partner drug resistance, and to recommend alternativ­e treatments in Southeast Asia and beyond”, the study says.

Francois Nosten of the Shoklo Malaria Research Unit, a field station for tropical medicine faculty at Mahidol University in Bangkok, said the researcher­s’ findings were a major advancemen­t for Cambodia and the region. “It allows us to track the progressio­n of resistance to this important drug – piperaquin­e,” he said in an email. “It confirms that [after] the fall of the artemisini­ns, the partner drugs are now failing as well.”

Scientists at the Pasteur Institute and the National Malaria Control program participat­ed in the research. Researcher­s at the institute and Huy Rekol, director of the National Malaria Centre couldn’t be reached for comment yesterday. As of late August, a total of 13,370 malaria cases, but no deaths, had been reported this year.

 ?? TANG CHHIN SOTHY/AFP ?? A health worker looks at malaria samples under a microscope at a Pailin province health centre in 2012.
TANG CHHIN SOTHY/AFP A health worker looks at malaria samples under a microscope at a Pailin province health centre in 2012.

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