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. 2007 Jun;101(6):534-9.
doi: 10.1016/j.trstmh.2007.01.003. Epub 2007 Mar 21.

Vivax malaria: preliminary observations following a shorter course of treatment with artesunate plus primaquine

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Vivax malaria: preliminary observations following a shorter course of treatment with artesunate plus primaquine

Nguyen Van Hoang Dao et al. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 2007 Jun.

Abstract

The standard adult treatment regimen for Plasmodium vivax malaria is chloroquine (1500 mg over 3 d) plus primaquine (15 or 30 mg daily for 14 d), but patient compliance tends to be poor with the lengthy course. Preliminary observations are reported on the efficacy of a shorter treatment course - artesunate (200mg twice a day for 2 d) plus primaquine (22.5mg base twice a day for 7 d) - given to 28 adult patients infected with P. vivax in Viet Nam. All patients responded quickly to treatment with mean (SD) parasite and fever clearance times of 14.2 (4.0) and 18.6 (8.4) h, respectively. The high dose of primaquine was generally well tolerated, and only one patient (3.6%) had a recurrence of parasitaemia during 28 d of follow-up. As most patients infected with Southeast Asian strains of P. vivax have their first relapse within 28 d after treatment with rapidly eliminated blood schizonticides, the absence of parasitaemia in the remaining 27 patients suggests that this drug regimen was active against both blood and liver stages. Further studies are needed to confirm that this rapidly acting, short artesunate-primaquine regimen can result in better patient compliance and treatment outcomes than the chloroquine-primaquine regimen.

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