AI Article Synopsis

  • Primaquine (PQ) is an antimalarial drug that helps reduce malaria transmission by clearing mature gametocytes, but it poses a risk of drug-induced hemolysis in individuals with G6PD deficiency.
  • Research focused on the G6PD A- variant but also examined 20 other SNPs to understand their relationship with hemolysis after administering low doses of PQ to 957 people across Africa.
  • The study found that while the A- variant plays a significant role, other G6PD polymorphisms did not show a meaningful impact on hemolysis after PQ treatment based on the analyzed data.

Article Abstract

Primaquine (PQ) is an antimalarial drug with the potential to reduce malaria transmission due to its capacity to clear mature gametocytes in the human host. However, the large-scale roll-out of PQ has to be counterbalanced by the additional risk of drug-induced hemolysis in individuals suffering from Glucose-6-phospate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, a genetic condition determined by polymorphisms on the X-linked gene. Most studies on G6PD deficiency and PQ-associated hemolysis focused on the G6PD A- variant, a combination of the two single nucleotide changes G202A (rs1050828) and A376G (rs1050829), although other polymorphisms may play a role. In this study, we tested the association of 20 G6PD single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with hemolysis measured seven days after low single dose of PQ given at the dose of 0.1 mg/kg to 0.75 mg/kg in 957 individuals from 6 previously published clinical trials investigating the safety and efficacy of this drug spanning five African countries. After adjusting for inter-study effects, age, gender, baseline hemoglobin level, PQ dose, and parasitemia at screening, our analysis showed putative association signals from the common G6PD mutation, A376G [-log(-value) = 2.44] and two less-known SNPs, rs2230037 [-log(-value] = 2.60), and rs28470352 [-log(-value) = 2.15]; A376G and rs2230037 were in very strong linkage disequilibrium with each other ( = 0.978). However, when the effects of these SNPs were included in the same regression model, the subsequent associations were in the borderline of statistical significance. In conclusion, whilst a role for the A- variant is well established, we did not observe an important additional role for other G6PD polymorphisms in determining post-treatment hemolysis in individuals treated with low single-dose PQ.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8062977PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2021.645688DOI Listing

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