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BackgroundRecent cases of clinical failure in malaria patients in the United Kingdom (UK) treated with artemether-lumefantrine have implications for malaria chemotherapy worldwide.MethodsParasites were isolated from an index case of confirmed Plasmodium falciparum treatment failure after standard treatment, and from comparable travel-acquired UK malaria cases. Drug susceptibility in vitro and genotypes at 6 resistance-associated loci were determined for all parasite isolates and compared with clinical outcomes for each parasite donor.ResultsA traveler, who returned to the UK from Uganda in 2022 with Plasmodium falciparum malaria, twice failed treatment with full courses of artemether-lumefantrine. Parasites from the patient exhibited significantly reduced susceptibility to artemisinin (ring-stage survival, 17.3% [95% confidence interval {CI}, 13.6%-21.1%]; P < .0001) and lumefantrine (effective concentration preventing 50% of growth = 259.4 nM [95% CI, 130.6-388.2 nM]; P = .001). Parasite genotyping identified an allele of pfk13 encoding both the A675V variant in the Pfk13 propeller domain and a novel L145V nonpropeller variant. In vitro susceptibility testing of 6 other P. falciparum lines of Ugandan origin identified reduced susceptibility to artemisinin and lumefantrine in 1 additional line, also from a 2022 treatment failure case. These parasites did not harbor a pfk13 propeller domain variant but rather the novel nonpropeller variant T349I. Variant alleles of pfubp1, pfap2mu, and pfcoronin were also identified among the 7 parasite lines.ConclusionsWe confirm, in a documented case of artemether-lumefantrine treatment failure imported from Uganda, the presence of pfk13 mutations encoding L145V and A675V. Parasites with reduced susceptibility to both artemisinin and lumefantrine may be emerging in Uganda.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1093/cid/ciad724

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2024-02-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

78

Pages

445 - 452

Total pages

7

Addresses

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Keywords

Humans, Plasmodium falciparum, Malaria, Malaria, Falciparum, Artemisinins, Protozoan Proteins, Antimalarials, Treatment Failure, Drug Resistance, Uganda, United Kingdom, Artemether, Artemether, Lumefantrine Drug Combination, Lumefantrine