AI Article Synopsis

  • Malaria is a serious parasitic illness with 249 million cases and 608,000 deaths in 2022, heavily impacting children under five.
  • Standard testing methods for treatments are often insufficient due to the disease's unique characteristics and diverse affected populations, necessitating tailored safety assessments.
  • The text outlines best practices for evaluating antimalarial drugs, especially small molecules, emphasizing the importance of repeat dose toxicity studies and specific timing for reproductive and juvenile toxicity assessments to improve treatment efficacy and compliance.

Article Abstract

Malaria is an acute, debilitating parasitic illness. There were 249 million cases of malaria in 2022, resulting in 608,000 deaths globally, 76% of which were children ≤5 years. The unique nature of this disease (recurrences leading to re-treatments and numerous organ systems affected), specific clinical treatment regimens, poor compliance, and diversity of affected populations (predominantly pediatrics, women of childbearing potential, pregnant and lactating women), often makes standard testing approaches inadequate, and tailor-made safety assessments are more appropriate. We provide best practice recommendations based on company experience for the non-clinical safety assessment of antimalarial drugs, with a focus on small molecules since they represent the majority of drug candidates for this illness. We focus on specific testing considerations for repeat dose toxicity studies, including combination toxicity assessments, since new drug treatment regimens typically foresee short treatment durations to improve compliance (i.e., 1 day) with combinations of compounds to improve efficacy and limit potential resistance. Due to the target population, the timing of reproductive, developmental, and juvenile toxicity studies may be earlier than general testing roadmaps for other small molecule drugs. In conclusion, key recommendations presented should enable a more effective and efficient development path whilst protecting clinical trial participants and patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yrtph.2024.105736DOI Listing

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