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. 2008 May 7;3(5):e2132.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002132.

Antimalarial drug quality in the most severely malarious parts of Africa - a six country study

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Antimalarial drug quality in the most severely malarious parts of Africa - a six country study

Roger Bate et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

A range of antimalarial drugs were procured from private pharmacies in urban and peri-urban areas in the major cities of six African countries, situated in the part of that continent and the world that is most highly endemic for malaria. Semi-quantitative thin-layer chromatography (TLC) and dissolution testing were used to measure active pharmaceutical ingredient content against internationally acceptable standards. 35% of all samples tested failed either or both tests, and were substandard. Further, 33% of treatments collected were artemisinin monotherapies, most of which (78%) were manufactured in disobservance of an appeal by the World Health Organisation (WHO) to withdraw these clinically inappropriate medicines from the market. The high persistence of substandard drugs and clinically inappropriate artemisinin monotherapies in the private sector risks patient safety and, through drug resistance, places the future of malaria treatment at risk globally.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: In the past five years Roger Bate and Amir Attaran received travel grants from pharmaceutical company Novartis, and Amir Attaran received a consulting fee. No funding was received in respect of this research. Amir Attaran also received consulting and/or travel fees from the WHO and World Bank, and is a member of the WHO Global Malaria Programme Technical and Research Advisory Committee. No member of the study team received any funds from a competing interest for the performance of this study.

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