- Majority of Brits 'never discuss sexual health'
- New super A carrots boost vision
- Funeral industry workers at greater leukemia risk
- Simple test to predict a person's likelihood of breaking hip
- Here's why some people can't quit cocaine
- Vicks nasal sprays recalled over bacteria fears
Combination therapies may be as good as treated bednets in preventing malaria
Washington, Nov 25 (ANI): A new study has found that artemisinin combination therapies (ACTs) could be almost as effective in reducing transmission of malaria as insecticide-treated bednets (ITNs) in areas of low transmission.
Researchers from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, with colleagues from Imperial College, London (UK) and Radboud Unversity in Nijmegen in the Netherlands used mathematical modelling to predict the potential impact on transmission outcomes of introducing ACT as the first-line treatment for uncomplicated malaria in six areas of Tanzania.
-
E-mail Article
Printer Friendly
Text-Size

The effects of ACT were estimated from clinical trial data.
The researchers found that the reductions in infection and clinical episodes of malaria were predicted to be highest in areas of low transmission, where it was estimated that a 53 percent decrease in clinical episodes might occur if all current treatments were switched to ACT.
This compared to 21 percent in the areas with the highest transmission.
"Overall, we predict that at existing treatment rates, a 100 percent switch to ACT from non-artemisinin drugs could reduce the rate of clinical episodes of malaria by between 21 and 53 percent if a short-acting ACT such as artemether-lumefantrine was used," Lucy Okell, Research Degree Student at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and lead author of the study, said.
"The impact is smallest in the highest transmission settings, but it could be up to three times greater in these areas if a long-acting ACT regimen was used. As endemic countries gear up for malaria eradication, a target called for by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in 2007, it will be important to know how choice of first-line treatment can help reach this goal," Okell added.
The study is published in the journal PLoS Medicine. (ANI)
Combination therapies may be as good as treated bednets in preventing malaria.
Combination therapies may be effective against hepatitis C virus.
Combination of biomarkers may improve diagnosis, management of heart failure.
Combination of low-power processors and flash memory creates energy efficient server.



