Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Alarm as 'super malaria' spreads in South East Asia

- By James Gallagher

The rapid spread of 'super malaria' in South East Asia is an alarming global threat, scientists warn. This dangerous form of the malaria parasite cannot be killed with the main anti-malaria drugs. It emerged in Cambodia but has since spread through parts of Thailand, Laos and has arrived in southern Vietnam.

The team at the Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit in Bangkok said there was a real danger of malaria becoming untreatabl­e. Prof Arjen Dondorp, the head of the unit, told BBC: "We think it is a serious threat. It is alarming that this strain is spreading so quickly through the whole region and we fear it can spread further [and eventually] jump to Africa."

In a letter, published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases, the researcher­s detail the "recent sinister developmen­t" that has seen resistance to the drug artemisini­n emerge. About 212 million people are infected with malaria each year. It is caused by a parasite that is spread by blood- sucking mosquitoes and is a major killer of children.

The treatment for malaria is artemisini­n in combinatio­n with piperaquin­e. But as artemisini­n has become less effective, the parasite has now evolved to resist piperaquin­e too. There have now been "alarming rates of failure".

Prof Dondorp said the treatment was failing around a third of the time in Vietnam while in some regions of Cambodia the failure rate was closer to 60%. Resistance to the drugs would be catastroph­ic in Africa, where 92% of all malaria cases happen.

Prof Dondorp added: "It's a race against the clock - we have to eliminate it before malaria becomes untreatabl­e again and we see a lot of deaths. I'm quite worried."

Michael Chew, from the Wellcome Trust medical research charity, said: "The spread of this malaria 'superbug' strain, resistant to the most effective drug we have, is alarming and has major implicatio­ns for public health globally. Around 700,000 people a year die from drug-resistant infections, including malaria."

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