Shanks G Dennis, Edstein Michael D
Australian Army Malaria Institute, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Drugs. 2005;65(15):2091-110. doi: 10.2165/00003495-200565150-00003.
Currently available medications for malaria chemoprophylaxis are efficacious but the problems of patient compliance, the advance of parasite drug resistance, and real or perceived serious adverse effects mean that new chemical compounds are needed.Primaquine, which has been widely used to treat relapsing malaria since the 1950s, has been shown to prevent malaria when taken daily. Tafenoquine is a new 8-aminoquinoline with a much longer half-life than primaquine. Field trials to date indicate that tafenoquine is efficacious and can be taken weekly or perhaps even less frequently. Both primaquine and tafenoquine require exact knowledge of a person's glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase status in order to prevent drug-induced haemolysis. Other potential malaria chemoprophylactic drugs such as third-generation antifol compounds and Mannich bases have reached advanced preclinical testing. Mefloquine has been seen to cause serious neuropsychiatric adverse effects on rare occasions. Recent public controversy regarding reputedly common serious adverse effects has made many Western travellers unwilling to take mefloquine. Special risk groups exposed to malaria, such as long-term travellers, children, pregnant women, aircrew and those requiring unimpeded psychomotor reactions, migrants returning to visit malarious countries of origin and febrile persons who have returned from malaria endemic areas, all require a nuanced approach to the use of drugs to prevent malaria. The carrying of therapeutic courses of antimalarial drugs to be taken only if febrile illness develops is indicated in very few travellers despite its appeal to some who fear adverse effects more than they fear potentially lethal malaria infection. Travellers with a significant exposure to malaria require a comprehensive plan for prevention that includes anti-mosquito measures but which is still primarily be based on the regular use of efficacious antimalarial medications.
目前可用于疟疾化学预防的药物是有效的,但患者依从性问题、寄生虫耐药性的发展以及实际或感知到的严重不良反应意味着需要新的化合物。自20世纪50年代以来广泛用于治疗复发性疟疾的伯氨喹,已被证明每日服用时可预防疟疾。tafenoquine是一种新型8-氨基喹啉,半衰期比伯氨喹长得多。迄今为止的现场试验表明,tafenoquine是有效的,并且可以每周服用一次,甚至服用频率更低。伯氨喹和tafenoquine都需要确切了解一个人的葡萄糖6-磷酸脱氢酶状态,以预防药物性溶血。其他潜在的疟疾化学预防药物,如第三代抗叶酸化合物和曼尼希碱,已进入临床前高级试验阶段。甲氟喹在极少数情况下会引起严重的神经精神不良反应。最近关于据称常见的严重不良反应的公众争议,使许多西方旅行者不愿服用甲氟喹。暴露于疟疾的特殊风险群体,如长期旅行者、儿童、孕妇、机组人员以及那些需要不受阻碍的精神运动反应的人、返回疟疾流行国家探亲的移民以及从疟疾流行地区返回的发热者,都需要采取细致入微的方法来使用预防疟疾的药物。尽管携带抗疟药物治疗疗程仅在发热疾病发生时服用对一些更害怕不良反应而不是潜在致命疟疾感染的人有吸引力,但只有极少数旅行者会这样做。大量暴露于疟疾的旅行者需要一个全面的预防计划,其中包括防蚊措施,但仍主要基于定期使用有效的抗疟药物。