General

FDA Approves Drug to Stop Some Malaria Relapses

Author : NewsGram Desk

U.S. regulators Friday approved a simpler, one-dose treatment to prevent relapses of malaria.

Standard treatment now takes two weeks and studies show many patients don't finish taking every dose.

Malaria is caused by parasites that are spread to people through mosquito bites. Anti-malarial drugs can cure the initial infection, but parasites can get into the liver, hide in a dormant form and cause recurrences months or years later. A second drug is used to stop relapses.

The new drug, GlaxoSmithKline's Krintafel, only targets the kind of malaria that mainly occurs in South America and Southeast Asia. Most malaria cases and deaths are in Africa, and they involve another species.

In testing, one dose of Krintafel worked about the same as two weeks of the standard treatment, preventing relapses in about three-quarters of patients in six months, the company said.

Malaria is caused by parasites that are spread to people through mosquito bites. (VOA)

The Food and Drug Administration approved the drug for patients 16 and older, according to GlaxoSmithKline. The company said it's the first new treatment in six decades for preventing relapses.

GlaxoSmithKline plans to apply soon for approval in Brazil, then other countries where the malaria type is common. It says it will sell the pills at low cost in poor countries.

Millions infected worldwide

Worldwide, malaria infects more than 200 million people a year and kills about half a million, most of them children in Africa. It causes fever, headache, chills and other flulike symptoms. The malaria type Krintafel targets causes about 8.5 million infections annually.

The British drugmaker, working with the World Health Organization, is also developing what could be the world's first malaria vaccine, but early testing indicates it's not very effective. Prevention now focuses on using insecticides and bed nets. (VOA)

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube and WhatsApp 

Bill Clinton Spokesperson Accuses DOJ of Selective Transparency in Epstein Files Release, Calls for Full Disclosure of All Related Records

“One Month to Learn Hindi”: Delhi BJP Councillor Threatens Foreign Football Coach in Language Row

No Deaths Linked to Codeine Cough Syrup in Uttar Pradesh, Says CM Yogi

Obesity a Serious Public Health Challenge, Not a Cosmetic Issue: Union Minister Jitendra Singh

Indian Names Surface in Epstein Documents: PM Modi, Union Minister Hardeep Singh Puri and Anil Ambani Mentioned, What Does This Connection Suggest?