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Chemotherapy against human African trypanosomiasis: is there a road to success?
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 524426
Author(s) Burri, Christian
Author(s) at UniBasel Burri, Christian
Year 2010
Title Chemotherapy against human African trypanosomiasis: is there a road to success?
Journal Parasitology
Volume 137
Number 14
Pages / Article-Number 1987-94
Keywords Human African trypanosomiasis, sleeping sickness, treatment, drugs, pentamidine, suramin, melarsoprol, eflornithine, NECT, pafuramidine maleate, DB289, fexinidazole
Abstract SUMMARYFor over fifty years, human African trypanosomiasis (HAT, sleeping sickness) has been treated with suramin, pentamidine and the very toxic organo-arsenical melarsoprol that was the only drug available for effective treatment of the second stage of the disease. Recently there have been significant efforts using molecular and biochemical approaches to drug design, including high-throughput screening, but the number of lead compounds with promising activity against T. brucei spp. and an acceptable toxicity index has remained astonishingly small. Clinical research continues to be difficult due to the economic constraints and the complexity of trials on a low prevalence disease in remote and impoverished African regions. Despite those limitations the situation for the patients is improving thanks to the combination of a number of critical factors. By the late 1990s the disease had reached epidemic levels that triggered political support. WHO would sign a donation agreement with the manufacturers for all drugs to treat HAT. A result of this agreement was that eflornithine which is much safer than melarsoprol became available and widely used by non-governmental organizations. The Impamel I and II programmes demonstrated that against all odds the conduct of clinical trials on HAT was feasible. This allowed the initiation of trials on combination therapies which eventually resulted in the nifurtimox-eflornithine combination treatment (NECT). This combination is currently being introduced as first line treatment, and there is even the prospect of having a new compound, fexinidazole, in the development pipeline. This review summarizes the key information about the existing drugs and gives a comprehensive summary about the recent and currently ongoing efforts towards new drugs
Publisher Cambridge University Press
ISSN/ISBN 0031-1820
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A5842838
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1017/S0031182010001137
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20961469
ISI-Number WOS:000284702200003
Document type (ISI) Journal Article, Review
 
   

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