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Drug susceptibility of Plasmodium falciparum in eastern Uganda: a longitudinal phenotypic and genotypic study
Natural Sciences and Mathematics | Faculty Scholarship
  • Patrick K. Tumwebaze, Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration
  • Thomas Katairo, Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration
  • Martin Okitwi, Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration
  • Oswald Byaruhanga, Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration
  • Stephen Orena, Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration
  • Victor Asua, Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration
  • Marvin Duvalsaint, University of California, San Francisco
  • Jennifer Legac, University of California, San Francisco
  • Sevil Chelebieva, Dominican University of California
  • Frida G. Ceja, Dominican University of California
  • Stephanie A. Rasmussen, Dominican University of California
  • Melissa D. Conrad, University of California, San Francisco
  • Samuel L. Nsobya, Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration
  • Ozkan Aydemir, Brown University
  • Jeffrey A. Bailey, Brown University
  • Brett R. Bayles, Dominican University of California
  • Philip J. Rosenthal, University of California, San Francisco
  • Roland A. Cooper, Dominican University of California
Department
Natural Sciences and Mathematics
Document Type
Article
Source
The Lancet. Microbe
Publication Date
9-1-2021
Disciplines
Abstract

Background: Treatment and control of malaria depends on artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) and is challenged by drug resistance, but thus far resistance to artemisinins and partner drugs has primarily occurred in southeast Asia. The aim of this study was to characterise antimalarial drug susceptibility of Plasmodium falciparum isolates from Tororo and Busia districts in Uganda.

Methods: In this prospective longitudinal study, P falciparum isolates were collected from patients aged 6 months or older presenting at the Tororo District Hospital (Tororo district, a site with relatively low malaria incidence) or Masafu General Hospital (Busia district, a high-incidence site) in eastern Uganda with clinical symptoms of malaria, a positive Giemsa-stained blood film for P falciparum, and no signs of severe disease. Ex-vivo susceptibilities to ten antimalarial drugs were measured using a 72-h microplate growth inhibition assay with SYBR Green detection. Relevant P falciparum genetic polymorphisms were characterised by molecular methods. We compared results with those from earlier studies in this region and searched for associations between drug susceptibility and parasite genotypes.

Findings: From June 10, 2016, to July 29, 2019, 361 P falciparum isolates were collected in the Busia district and 79 in the Tororo district from 440 participants. Of 440 total isolates, 392 (89%) successfully grew in culture and showed excellent drug susceptibility for chloroquine (median half-maximal inhibitory concentration [IC50] 20·0 nM [IQR 12·0-26·0]), monodesethylamodiaquine (7·1 nM [4·3-8·9]), pyronaridine (1·1 nM [0·7-2·3]), piperaquine (5·6 nM [3·3-8·6]), ferroquine (1·8 nM [1·5-3·3]), AQ-13 (24·0 nM [17·0-32·0]), lumefantrine (5·1 nM [3·2-7·7]), mefloquine (9·5 nM [6·6-13·0]), dihydroartemisinin (1·5 nM [1·0-2·0]), and atovaquone (0·3 nM [0·2-0·4]). Compared with results from our study in 2010-13, significant improvements in susceptibility were seen for chloroquine (median IC50 288·0 nM [IQR 122·0-607·0]; p100 nM) was more common in isolates from the Tororo district (11 [15%] of 71), compared with those from the Busia district (12 [4%] of 320; p=0·0017). We showed significant increases between 2010-12 and 2016-19 in the prevalences of wild-type P falciparum multidrug resistance protein 1 (PfMDR1) Asn86Tyr from 60% (391 of 653) to 99% (418 of 422; pP falciparum chloroquine resistance transporter (PfCRT) Lys76Thr from 7% (44 of 675) to 87% (364 of 417; p<0·0001).

Interpretation: Our results show marked changes in P falciparum drug susceptibility phenotypes and genotypes in Uganda during the past decade. These results suggest that additional changes will be seen over time and continued surveillance of susceptibility to key ACT components is warranted.

Funding: National Institutes of Health and Medicines for Malaria Venture.

PubMed ID
34553183
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Citation Information
Patrick K. Tumwebaze, Thomas Katairo, Martin Okitwi, Oswald Byaruhanga, et al.. "Drug susceptibility of Plasmodium falciparum in eastern Uganda: a longitudinal phenotypic and genotypic study" Vol. 2 Iss. 9 (2021) p. 441 - 441 ISSN: 2666-5247
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/roland_cooper/75/