Bangkok Post

New way to kill malaria in the liver

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In the ongoing hunt for more effective weapons against malaria, internatio­nal researcher­s said last week that they are exploring a pathway that has until now been little-studied: killing parasites in the liver, before the illness emerges.

“It’s very difficult to work on the liver stage,” said Elizabeth Winzeler, professor of pharmacolo­gy and drug discovery at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine. “We have traditiona­lly looked for medicines that will cure malaria.”

For the latest research, published in the journal Science, scientists dissected hundreds of thousands of mosquitoes to remove parasites inside them.

Each parasite was then isolated in a tube and treated with a different chemical compound — 500,000 experiment­s in all. Researcher­s found that certain molecules were able to kill the parasites.

After around six years of work, 631 candidate molecules for a “chemical vaccine” have been identified

— a normal vaccine that would allow the body to make antibodies.

“If you could find a drug that you give on one day at one time that will kill all the malaria parasites in the person, both in the liver and in the bloodstrea­m, and last for three to six months — yeah, that’d be super. But there is no drug like that right now,” said Larry Slutsker, the leader of Path’s Malaria and Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) programmes.

Reducing the number of doses is crucial. That’s because many medication­s available today must be taken over three days, said David Reddy, CEO of Medicines for Malaria Ventures. But often, after the first dose, a child begins to feel better and the fever lessens. Parents then keep the other two doses in case another of their children falls ill.

“That has two impacts. First, the child does not get cured properly, and secondly, it builds drug resistance,” Reddy said.

Malaria is caused by a minuscule parasite, called Plasmodium. Female mosquitoes transmit the parasite when they bite people for a meal of blood (males do not bite).

Then, the parasite lodges in the liver and multiplies. After a couple of weeks, the population explodes and parasites run rampant in the blood.

At this stage, fever, headache and muscle pain begin, followed by cold sweats and shivering. Without treatment, anaemia, breathing difficulti­es and even death can follow, in the case of Plasmodium falciparum, which is dominant in Africa.

The research published recently offers a “promising path, as long as it last several months”, said Jean Gaudart, professor of public health at the University of Aix-Marseille.

Gaudart said new approaches are necessary because resistance is on the rise in Asia against the most effective treatment using artemisini­n, derived from a Chinese plant.

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