Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease (Jul 2023)

Hair concentrations of anti-malarials in returned travellers-the HAIR study: Proof of principle analysis

  • Regula Steiner,
  • Anne Kaulich,
  • Daniel Müller,
  • Patricia Schlagenhauf

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54
p. 102590

Abstract

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Background: Hair analysis to identify substance use is an established methodology. This could also be a method to monitor adherence to antimalarial drugs. We aimed to establish a methodology to determine hair concentrations of atovaquone, proguanil and mefloquine in travellers using chemoprophylaxis. Methods: A liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method was developed and validated for simultaneous analysis of the antimalarial drugs -atovaquone (ATQ), proguanil (PRO) and mefloquine (MQ), in human hair. The hair samples from five volunteers were used for this proof-of-concept analysis. Three volunteers were taking daily atovaquone/proguanil (ATQ/PRO) chemoprophylaxis and two volunteers were using weekly mefloquine (MQ) chemoprophylaxis. Results: With this proof-of-principle analysis, we could show that ATQ/PRO and MQ are integrated into the hair matrix. Chemoprophylaxis could be quantified with the established method. In hair segments, maximal concentrations of 3.0 ng/mL/20 mg hair proguanil, 1.3 ng/mL/20 mg hair atovaquone and 78.3 ng/mL/20 mg hair mefloquine were measured. Moreover, malaria drug concentration changes correlated with the time interval since finishing the chemoprophylaxis regimen. Conclusions: The validated method was used successfully for the analysis of antimalarial-drug positive hair samples containing atovaquone, proguanil or mefloquine. This research shows that hair can be used for adherence monitoring of chemoprophylaxis and paves the way for larger studies and optimized procedures.

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