抗疟药物耐药性及其对世界卫生组织全球技术战略的影响。

3区 医学
Current Epidemiology Reports Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-03-14 DOI:10.1007/s40471-021-00266-5
Matthew M Ippolito, Kara A Moser, Jean-Bertin Bukasa Kabuya, Clark Cunningham, Jonathan J Juliano
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引用次数: 37

摘要

审查目的:世界卫生组织发布《全球疟疾技术战略》已经五年了。在那段时间里,防治疟疾的进展停滞不前。这篇综述的重点是抗疟耐药性对GTS的影响,以及寄生虫基因组学和抗疟药理学的中期进展如何为对抗它提供了保障。最近的发现:在全球疟原虫种群中扩展耐药性基因之前,首次对其进行了鉴定和验证。尽管低密度感染和多克隆性仍然是一个有待解决的问题,但已经开发出更有效的方法来检测和完善它们。耐多药疟疾替代方案的临床试验取得了有希望的结果。新的制剂仍在开发中,而撒哈拉以南非洲用于进行传播阻断剂第一阶段试验和试验的新生基础设施经过多年的准备已经实现。总结:这些和其他发展有助于为GTS的实施提供信息,因为全世界都在展望其未来二十年的实施。为了在耐药性带来的威胁面前保持领先地位,必须更广泛地应用基于基因组的监测和优化现有和即将推出的抗疟药物。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Antimalarial Drug Resistance and Implications for the WHO Global Technical Strategy.

Antimalarial Drug Resistance and Implications for the WHO Global Technical Strategy.

Purpose of review: Five years have passed since the World Health Organization released its Global Technical Strategy for Malaria (GTS). In that time, progress against malaria has plateaued. This review focuses on the implications of antimalarial drug resistance for the GTS and how interim progress in parasite genomics and antimalarial pharmacology offer a bulwark against it.

Recent findings: For the first time, drug resistance-conferring genes have been identified and validated before their global expansion in malaria parasite populations. More efficient methods for their detection and elaboration have been developed, although low-density infections and polyclonality remain a nuisance to be solved. Clinical trials of alternative regimens for multidrug-resistant malaria have delivered promising results. New agents continue down the development pipeline, while a nascent infrastructure in sub-Saharan Africa for conducting phase I trials and trials of transmission-blocking agents has come to fruition after years of preparation.

Summary: These and other developments can help inform the GTS as the world looks ahead to the next two decades of its implementation. To remain ahead of the threat that drug resistance poses, wider application of genomic-based surveillance and optimization of existing and forthcoming antimalarial drugs are essential.

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Current Epidemiology Reports
Current Epidemiology Reports OTORHINOLARYNGOLOGY-
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