RESPONSE OF PLASMODIUM-FALCIPARUM TO CHLOROQUINE TREATMENT - RELATION TO WHOLE-BLOOD CONCENTRATIONS OF CHLOROQUINE AND DESETHYLCHLOROQUINE

  • 1 January 1989
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 67  (2) , 197-202
Abstract
A standard treatment with 25 mg chloroquine base per kilogram body weight was given to 39 semiimmune asymptomatic Tanzanian schoolchildren with Plasmodium falciparum parasitaemia. Whole blood chloroquine and desethylchloroquine concentrations were monitored 12 times during 20 days of follow-up using 100 .mu.l capillary blood dried on filter-paper. All but three children had detectable amounts of chloroquine (.gtoreq.10 nmol/l) in their blood before treatment. The interindividual variations in concentrations during the first week were 3.3 to 5.1-fold for chloroquine and 3.5 to 6.3-fold for desethylchloroquine. In seven children with RII response in vivo, the highest determined chloroquine concentration was lower (P = 0.029) than in the others. After treatment, a rough approximation of the minimum inhibitory concentration in vivo was made by calculating the average of the chlorquine concentrations before and after the time when parasites increased or reappeared again. RII-resistant parasites increased in number when the median residual whole blood concentration in the children was approximately 790 (range, 444-869) mmol/l. Parasites reappeared when the median residual whole blood concentration was approximately 147 (range, 44-673) nmol/l. We conclude that interindividual variations of chloroquine concentrations have an impact on the outcome of treatment and the classification of resistance in vivo.