Evidence of artemisinin-resistant malaria in western Cambodia

H Noedl, Y Se, K Schaecher, BL Smith… - … England Journal of …, 2008 - Mass Medical Soc
H Noedl, Y Se, K Schaecher, BL Smith, D Socheat, MM Fukuda
New England Journal of Medicine, 2008Mass Medical Soc
To the Editor: Although artemisinins are potent and rapidly acting antimalarial drugs, their
widespread use for treating patients with Plasmodium falciparum malaria raises the question
of emerging drug resistance. 1, 2 Artemisinin monotherapy should not be used in areas
where malaria is endemic; it requires an extended administration period and may lead to
treatment failure, most frequently because of problems with compliance. Recent reports of
high failure rates associated with artemisinin-based combination therapy, as well as in vitro …
To the Editor: Although artemisinins are potent and rapidly acting antimalarial drugs, their widespread use for treating patients with Plasmodium falciparum malaria raises the question of emerging drug resistance.1,2 Artemisinin monotherapy should not be used in areas where malaria is endemic; it requires an extended administration period and may lead to treatment failure, most frequently because of problems with compliance. Recent reports of high failure rates associated with artemisinin-based combination therapy, as well as in vitro drug-susceptibility data, suggest the possibility of clinical artemisinin resistance along the Thai–Cambodian border.3,4 We studied the potential emergence of artemisinin resistance using . . .
The New England Journal Of Medicine