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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, July 2004, p . 2751-2752, Vol . 48, No . 7 Comparison of Artesunate and Chloroquine Activities against Plasmodium vivax GametocytesMathieu Nacher,1,2,3* Udomsak Silachamroon,1 Pratap Singhasivanon,1 Polrat Wilairatana,1 Weerapong Phumratanaprapin,1 Arnaud Fontanet,2 and Sornchai Looareesuwan1 Department of Clinical Tropical Medicine, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University, Bangkok,1 Shoklo Malaria Research Unit, Mae Sod, Thailand,2 Institut Pasteur, Unite de Recherche et d'Expertise, Epidemiologie des Maladies Emergentes, Paris, France3 Received 25 January 2004/ Returned for modification 14 March 2004/ Accepted 17 March 2004
Between 1993 and 2002, 2,078 patients aged 4 to 83 years were treated at the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in Bangkok for P . vivax malaria . From 1993 to 1998 patients received chloroquine phosphate (Thai Government Pharmaceutical Organization, Bangkok, Thailand) at 10 mg of base/kg of body weight followed by 5 mg of base/kg at h 6, 24, and 36 (n = 1,018) . From 1999 to 2002, patients were treated with artesunate (Guilin No . 1 Factory, Guanxi, People's Republic of China) at 3.3 mg/kg on the first day followed by 1.65 mg/kg for the following 4 days (n = 586) or artesunate at a dose of 1.65 mg/kg/day for 7 days (n = 474) . All patients gave informed consent, and the study was approved by the Ethical Committee of Mahidol University . Patients received oral paracetamol if they had a temperature above 38°C . Among the above patients, 516 (50.7%) of the patients receiving chloroquine and 607 (57.2%) of the patients receiving artesunate received primaquine at the end of their treatment (on the third day for patients receiving chloroquine and on the fifth or seventh day for patients receiving artesunate) to destroy hypnozoites . However, all but four patients (all in the chloroquine group) had already cleared their gametocytes when primaquine was started; therefore, it was inferred that primaquine was given too late to influence the studied outcome . Gametocytes per 200 leukocytes were counted every 12 h by experienced microscopists on Giemsa-stained thick smears until parasitemia became negative . For all patients, a complete blood count was performed on admission, allowing us to transform asexual parasite counts from thin or thick smears into parasitemia expressed in parasites per microliter of blood . The proportion of gametocyte carriers, the peak gametocyte count, and the gametocyte carriage duration were compared between treatment groups . To compare peak gametocyte counts and the proportion of gametocyte carriers between treatment groups, the analysis did not include 591 patients with gametocytes on admission (total number of patients analyzed = 1,487) . The Mann-Whitney test was used to compare medians, and a generalized linear model (binomial family with a log link function) was used to control for the initial parasitemia, age, and fever duration .
After excluding observations of patients with P . vivax gametocytes on admission, patients treated with artesunate were less likely to develop gametocyte carriage (Table 1) . Among patients with P . vivax gametocytes, the median peak gametocyte count was lower in patients treated with artesunate than in those treated with chloroquine, respectively: 465 per mm3 (interquartile range, 305 to 795 per mm3) versus 560 per mm3 (interquartile range, 355 to 975 per mm3) (P = 0.001) . Among patients with P . vivax gametocytes, patients treated with artesunate had detectable gametocytes for a shorter duration than those treated with chloroquine, respectively: median = 24 h (range, 0 to 96 h) versus 24 h (range, 0 to 264 h) (P = 0.005) . The lower gametocyte carriage with artesunate followed a temporal trend for odds (
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