Publications by authors named "Ana Carolina Rios Silvino"

Background: The relapsing nature of Plasmodium vivax infection is a major barrier to its control and elimination. Factors such as adequate dosing, adherence, drug quality, and pharmacogenetics can impact the effectiveness of radical cure of P. vivax and need to be adequately evaluated.

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relapse is one of the major causes of sustained global malaria transmission. Primaquine (PQ) is the only commercial drug available to prevent relapses, and its efficacy is dependent on metabolic activation by cytochrome P450 2D6 (CYP2D6). Impaired CYP2D6 function, caused by allelic polymorphisms, leads to the therapeutic failure of PQ as a radical cure for malaria.

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Background: Activation of hypnozoites of vivax malaria causes multiple clinical relapses, which contribute to the Plasmodium vivax burden and continuing transmission. Artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) is effective against blood-stage P. vivax but requires co-administration with primaquine to achieve radical cure.

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Although Plasmodium vivax relapses are classically associated with hypnozoite activation, it has been proposed that a proportion of these cases are due to primaquine (PQ) treatment failure caused by polymorphisms in cytochrome P-450 2D6 (CYP2D6). Here, we present evidence that CYP2D6 polymorphisms are implicated in PQ failure, which was reinforced by findings in genetically similar parasites, and may explain a number of vivax relapses. Using a computational approach, these polymorphisms were predicted to affect the activity of CYP2D6 through changes in the structural stability that could lead to disruption of the PQ-enzyme interactions.

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Synopsis of recent research by authors named "Ana Carolina Rios Silvino"

  • - Ana Carolina Rios Silvino's research primarily focuses on the pharmacogenetic aspects of treating Plasmodium vivax malaria, particularly the role of cytochrome P450 2D6 (CYP2D6) activity in the effectiveness of primaquine, the only drug available to prevent relapses of this form of malaria.
  • - Her studies demonstrate that genetic variations in CYP2D6 can lead to therapeutic failures of primaquine, thus contributing to ongoing malaria transmission and highlighting the need for individualizing treatment based on genetic profiles.
  • - Rios Silvino's findings emphasize the importance of adequate dosing and the pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics of primaquine in combination with artemisinin-based therapies, pointing to a crucial interplay between drug metabolism and malaria treatment outcomes.