Pyronaridine‐artesunate for treating uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria

08 Ene 2019

What is the aim of this review?

The aim of this Cochrane Review was to find out if the antimalarial drug pyronaridine‐artesunate is effective and safe to treat uncomplicated cases of an important type of malaria (P falciparum). We collected and analysed all relevant studies to answer this question and found 10 studies.

Key messages

Pyronaridine‐artesunate is effective in treating uncomplicated P falciparum malaria. Pyronaridine‐artesunate is generally safe, but some people who receive it have blood tests suggesting liver damage. This appears to neither be long‐lasting nor make people ill.

What was studied in the review?

The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that malaria is treated with combinations of drugs called artemisinin‐based combination therapies (ACTs). Pyronaridine‐artesunate is a new ACT. New ACTs are needed to treat malaria that has become resistant to currently available ACTs, and to help prevent malaria becoming more resistant to treatment.

We compared pyronaridine‐artesunate to other ACTs to evaluate its efficacy against P falciparum malaria, and compared pyronaridine‐artesunate and pyronaridine alone to other drugs to evaluate its safety.

What are the main results of the review?

We included 10 relevant studies. Seven studies were co‐funded by Shin Poong Pharmaceuticals which manufactures the drug. Three studies were funded by government agencies.

Three studies compared pyronaridine‐artesunate to artemether‐lumefantrine in adults and children of all ages in Africa and Asia. One study compared pyronaridine‐artesunate to artesunate‐amodiaquine in adults and older children in Africa. One study compared pyronaridine‐artesunate to mefloquine plus artesunate in adults and older children in Africa and Asia. We included another five studies when we looked at the safety of the drug.

Pyronaridine‐artesunate effectively treated uncomplicated P falciparum malaria, and may be at least as good as or better than existing ACTs (low‐ to moderate‐certainty evidence).

Pyronaridine‐artesunate increases the risk of having blood tests which suggest mild liver injury (moderate‐ to high‐certainty evidence). We did not find evidence that any such liver injury was severe or irreversible. We do not know how pyronaridine‐artesunate might affect people who already have liver damage.

We found two trials that exclusively recruited children under 12, with a total of 732 participants. Using the data from these trials, we did not find differences in treatment efficacy or safety between pyronaridine‐artesunate and artemether‐lumefantrine.

How up‐to‐date is the review?

We searched for studies that had been published up to 8 May 2018

Malaria