The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Malaria getting close to being untreatabl­e

Drug-resistant strain of malaria is making the disease ‘almost untreatabl­e’ in Southeast Asia

- By Ruby Mellen

LAST week, two studies found that the presence of drugresist­ant strains of malaria is on the rise in southeast Asia. The research has provoked alarm among scientists who are leading the fight against one of the world’s most stubborn health problems.

The disease is “getting close to being untreatabl­e,” said Arjen Dondorp a lead author of one the studies and the head of malaria research at the MahidolOxf­ord Tropical Medicine Research Unit in Thailand.

The strains are currently contained to parts of Southeast Asia where the disease has greatly declined over the last decade. But they could be devastatin­g if they were to reach more malaria-ridden regions such as sub-Saharan Africa, experts say.

Here are five key findings from the reports.

1. What did the studies find? Two studies published in the Lancet journal of infectious diseases last week found that resistance to the most common form of anti-malarial drugs has spread and gotten worse since 2013. To treat malaria cases, health workers primarily use a combinatio­n of di hydro artemis in in and piperaquin­e, or DHA-PPQ. The medication is given in pill form that can be taken by mouth.

According to the new research, in the regions tested, this treatment failed to cure the disease at an overall rate of 50 per cent - or 13 per cent in northeaste­rn Thailand, 38 per cent in western Cambodia, 73 per centin northeaste­rn Cambodia and 47 per cent in southweste­rn Vietnam.

2. Does that mean there are forms of malaria that can’t be cured?

Not exactly. There are several drug combinatio­ns out there that could still treat the resistant strains. But the treatments themselves can breed more resistance.

“In general, using treatments to kill microorgan­isms creates a selective advantage for resistance to emerge and spread,” said Will Hamilton, a medical student at the University of Cambridge and an author on one of the studies. “This is evolution by natural selection in action.” He compared the rising phenomenon of bacteria developing resistance­s to antibiotic­s.

And there are only a limited number of alternativ­e treatments.

“The problem with malaria is that the treatment options are very limited,” Dondorp said. “Once you can’t treat the infections very well, malaria will increase again, and once the number increases, the number of deaths will increase.” 3. Why is this happening in Southeast Asia?

Southeast Asia has historical­ly been a breeding ground for the developmen­t of resistant malaria strains. Scientists are not completely sure why, but suspect it’s partly to do with the fact that antimalari­al drugs are widely and heavily used there, Hamilton said. The pervasiven­ess of the medication puts pressure on the strains to adapt and find ways to develop resistance­s.

Another reason, Dondorp said, could be how malarial drugs are taken in the region. Patients with malaria may take weaker medication, or stop taking pills once they feel better instead of finishing out the treatment, making the parasites more resistant to the drugs.

Lastly, Southeast Asian countries have a relatively low transmissi­on rate, meaning resistant strains run up against less competitio­n from more dominant nonresista­nt strains.

4. What would happen if this resistance were to spread?

It would be bad. A major concern is that the strains will spread to sub-Saharan Africa, where malaria is most common and logistical­ly hard to treat.

There is precedent for this. In the 1960s, a strain of malaria that developed in Southeast Asia became resistant to the then-commonly-used drug chloroquin­e and eventually spread to sub-Saharan Africa. The lack of alternativ­e medication­s led to the amount of malaria-related deaths doubling in the 1980s.

Scientists fear history could repeat itself.

“The spread of these resistant parasites to other regions like Africa is highly possible and a real concern,” said Didier Mènard, the head of the Malaria Genetic and Resistance Group at the Institut Pasteur Paris and one of the reviewers of the studies.

5. What can be done in the meantime?

Ultimately, scientists say, the only way to completely eradicate these resistant strains is to eradicate the disease itself in the region.

Such efforts have taken place around the world since 1955, when the World Health Organizati­on created the Malaria Eradicatio­n Problem. Since then, dozens of countries have been declared as malaria free, but only two of them, the Maldives and Sri Lanka, are in Southeast Asia.

“We really have a great sense of urgency to eliminate malaria from the region,” said Dondorp, “otherwise we will never be able to eliminate malaria. It will come back and spread to other countries.” — The Washington Post

 ??  ?? A worker sprays insecticid­e for mosquitos at a village in Bangkok, Thailand. — Reuters photo
A worker sprays insecticid­e for mosquitos at a village in Bangkok, Thailand. — Reuters photo

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