Differential Ex Vivo Susceptibility Of Plasmodium Malariae And Plasmodium Falciparum Clinical Isolates From Ghana And Mali To Current And Lead Discovery Candidate Antimalarial Drugs
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Microbiology Spectrum
Abstract
Non-falciparum species causing malaria in humans are considered
neglected in the fight toward malaria elimination. Recent data highlight the increasing
contribution of Plasmodium malariae to malaria morbidity and mortality. In this study,
the susceptibility of P. malariae and Plasmodium falciparum to current antimalarial drugs
was compared to advanced lead candidate drugs using field isolates. The blood samples
were collected from the Central region of Ghana and Faladje and Kati in Mali. Following
this, an ex vivo drug efficacy assay was conducted by screening mono-infected isolates
against a panel of antimalarials. In Ghana, the susceptibility of the two species to most of
the current antimalarial drugs was comparable, except for artemether, sulfadoxine, and
atovaquone, for which the drugs were less potent against P. malariae than P. falciparum
(7.12 vs 2.15 nM, 25.72 vs 7.86 nM, and 10.38 vs 2.51 nM, respectively). In Mali, quinine
was significantly more potent against P. malariae than P. falciparum (18.35 and 26.84 nM),
and tafenoquine was less potent against P. malariae than P. falciparum (5.50 and 2.85 nM).
Among the candidate drugs, except INE963, whose inhibitory potency was compara ble between both species, the other compounds significantly inhibited P. malariae
more than P. falciparum. The data showed that current drugs investigated against the
isolates from Ghana may be suitable for curing P. malariae infections. However, in
Mali, chloroquine resistance appeared to have affected the suitability of quinine-based
compounds for non-falciparum malaria treatment. Therefore, additional studies are
required to establish the efficacy of artemether-lumefantrine for the treatment of P.
malariae infections.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Citation
Soulama, A., Sogore, F., Ansah, F., Diakite, O., Chirawurah, J. D., Maiga, F. O., ... & Aniweh, Y. (2025). Differential ex vivo susceptibility of Plasmodium malariae and Plasmodium falciparum clinical isolates from Ghana and Mali to current and lead discovery candidate antimalarial drugs. Microbiology Spectrum, 13(4), e02176-24.
