EBioMedicine (Oct 2023)

Pharmacokinetics of single low dose primaquine in Ugandan and Congolese children with falciparum malariaResearch in context

  • Mavuto Mukaka,
  • Marie A. Onyamboko,
  • Peter Olupot-Olupot,
  • Pimnara Peerawaranun,
  • Kanokon Suwannasin,
  • Watcharee Pagornrat,
  • Jindarat Kouhathong,
  • Wanassanan Madmanee,
  • Winifred Were,
  • Cate Namayanja,
  • Peter Onyas,
  • Harriet Titin,
  • Joy Baseke,
  • Rita Muhindo,
  • Daddy K. Kayembe,
  • Pauline O. Ndjowo,
  • Benjamin B. Basara,
  • Georgette S. Bongo,
  • Charles B. Okalebo,
  • Grace Abongo,
  • Sophie Uyoga,
  • Thomas N. Williams,
  • Chiraporn Taya,
  • Mehul Dhorda,
  • Arjen M. Dondorp,
  • Naomi Waithira,
  • Mallika Imwong,
  • Kathryn Maitland,
  • Caterina Fanello,
  • Nicholas P.J. Day,
  • Joel Tarning,
  • Nicholas J. White,
  • Walter R.J. Taylor

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 96
p. 104805

Abstract

Read online

Summary: Background: There are no pharmacokinetic data of single low dose primaquine (SLDPQ) as transmission blocking in African children with acute Plasmodium falciparum and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency (G6PDd). Methods: Primaquine pharmacokinetics of age-dosed SLDPQ (shown previously to be gametocytocidal with similar tolerability as placebo) were characterised in falciparum-infected Ugandan and Congolese children aged 6 months to 11 years, treated on admission with standard 3-day dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine or artemether-lumefantrine plus SLDPQ: 6 m–<1 y: 1.25 mg, 1–5 y: 2.5 mg, 6–9 y: 5 mg, 10–11 y: 7.5 mg. LC-MS/MS-measured plasma primaquine and carboxyprimaquine (baseline, 1, 1.5, 2, 4, 8, 12, 24 h) were analysed by noncompartmental analysis. Multivariable linear regression modelled associations between covariates, including cytochrome-P450 2D6 metaboliser status, and outcomes. Findings: 258 children (median age 5 [interquartile range (IQR) 3–7]) were sampled; 8 (3.1%) with early vomiting were excluded. Primaquine doses of 0.10–0.40 (median 0.21, IQR 0.16–0.25) mg base/kg resulted in primaquine maximum plasma concentrations (Cmax) of 2.3–447 (median 103.0, IQR 72.1–140.0) ng/mL between 1.0 and 8.0 (median 2) hours (Tmax) and median areas under the drug concentration curves (AUC0-last) 730.2 (6 m–<1 y, n = 12), 582.8 (1–5 y, n = 126), 871.1 (6–9 y, n = 80), and 931.0 (10–11 y, n = 32) ng∗h/mL. Median elimination half-live (T½) was 4.7 (IQR 3.8–5.6) hours. Primaquine clearance/kg peaked at 18 months, plateauing at 4 y. Increasing CYP2D6 metaboliser activity score [poor (3/250), intermediate (52/250), normal (150/250), ultrarapid (5/250), indeterminate (40/250)] and baseline haemoglobin were significantly associated with a lower primaquine AUC0-last,which increased with increasing mg/kg dose and age but was independent of the artemisinin treatment used. Interpretation: Age-dosed SLDPQ resulted in variable primaquine exposure that depended on bodyweight-adjusted dose, age, baseline haemoglobin and CYP2D6 metaboliser status, but not on dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine or artemether-lumefantrine. These data support age-dosed SLDPQ for transmission blocking in sub-Saharan Africa. Funding: This work was cofunded by the UK Medical Research Council, Wellcome Trust, and UK Aid through the Global Health Trials (grant reference MR/P006973/1). The funders had no role in the study design, execution, and analysis and decisions regarding publication.

Keywords