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Strong correlation of lumefantrine concentrations in capillary and venous plasma from malaria patients

BACKGROUND: Lumefantrine is a long-acting antimalarial drug with an elimination half-life of over 3 days and protein binding of 99 percent. Correlation of lumefantrine concentrations from capillary plasma via fingerprick (C(c)) versus venous plasma (C(v)) remains to be defined. METHODS: Venous and c...

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Autores principales: Huang, Liusheng, Mwebaza, Norah, Kajubi, Richard, Marzan, Florence, Forsman, Camilla, Parikh, Sunil, Aweeka, Francesca T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6095545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30114201
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0202082
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author Huang, Liusheng
Mwebaza, Norah
Kajubi, Richard
Marzan, Florence
Forsman, Camilla
Parikh, Sunil
Aweeka, Francesca T.
author_facet Huang, Liusheng
Mwebaza, Norah
Kajubi, Richard
Marzan, Florence
Forsman, Camilla
Parikh, Sunil
Aweeka, Francesca T.
author_sort Huang, Liusheng
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Lumefantrine is a long-acting antimalarial drug with an elimination half-life of over 3 days and protein binding of 99 percent. Correlation of lumefantrine concentrations from capillary plasma via fingerprick (C(c)) versus venous plasma (C(v)) remains to be defined. METHODS: Venous and capillary plasma samples were collected simultaneously from children, pregnant women, and non-pregnant adults at 2, 24, 120hr post last dose of a standard 3-day artemether-lumefantrine regimen they received for uncomplicated malaria. Some of the enrolled children and pregnant women were also HIV-infected. Samples were analyzed via liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. Linear regression analysis was performed using the program Stata® SE12.1. RESULTS: In children, the linear regression equations for C(c) vs C(v) at 2, 24, and 120hr (day 7) post dose are [C(c)] = 1.05*[C(v)]+95.0 (n = 142, R(2) = 0.977), [C(c)] = 0.995*[C(v)]+56.7 (n = 147, R(2) = 0.990) and [C(c)] = 0.958*[C(v)]+18.6 (n = 139, R(2) = 0.994), respectively. For pregnant women, the equations are [C(c)] = 1.04*[C(v)]+68.1 (n = 43, R(2) = 0.990), [C(c)] = 0.997*[C(v)]+37.3 (n = 43, R(2) = 0.993) and [C(c)] = 0.941*[C(v)]+11.1 (n = 41, R(2) = 0.941), respectively. For non-pregnant adults, the equations are [C(c)] = 1.05*[C(v)]-117 (n = 32, R(2) = 0.958), [C(c)] = 0.962*[C(v)]+9.21 (n = 32, R(2) = 0.964) and [C(c)] = 1.04*[C(v)]-40.1 (n = 32, R(2) = 0.988), respectively. In summary, a linear relationship with a slope of ~1 was found for capillary and venous lumefantrine levels in children, pregnant women and non-pregnant adults at 2hr, 24hr and 120hr post last dose, representing absorption, distribution, and elimination phases. CONCLUSIONS: Capillary and venous plasma concentration of lumefantrine can be used interchangeably at 1:1 ratio. Capillary sampling method via finger prick is a suitable alternative for sample collection in clinical studies.
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spelling pubmed-60955452018-08-30 Strong correlation of lumefantrine concentrations in capillary and venous plasma from malaria patients Huang, Liusheng Mwebaza, Norah Kajubi, Richard Marzan, Florence Forsman, Camilla Parikh, Sunil Aweeka, Francesca T. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Lumefantrine is a long-acting antimalarial drug with an elimination half-life of over 3 days and protein binding of 99 percent. Correlation of lumefantrine concentrations from capillary plasma via fingerprick (C(c)) versus venous plasma (C(v)) remains to be defined. METHODS: Venous and capillary plasma samples were collected simultaneously from children, pregnant women, and non-pregnant adults at 2, 24, 120hr post last dose of a standard 3-day artemether-lumefantrine regimen they received for uncomplicated malaria. Some of the enrolled children and pregnant women were also HIV-infected. Samples were analyzed via liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. Linear regression analysis was performed using the program Stata® SE12.1. RESULTS: In children, the linear regression equations for C(c) vs C(v) at 2, 24, and 120hr (day 7) post dose are [C(c)] = 1.05*[C(v)]+95.0 (n = 142, R(2) = 0.977), [C(c)] = 0.995*[C(v)]+56.7 (n = 147, R(2) = 0.990) and [C(c)] = 0.958*[C(v)]+18.6 (n = 139, R(2) = 0.994), respectively. For pregnant women, the equations are [C(c)] = 1.04*[C(v)]+68.1 (n = 43, R(2) = 0.990), [C(c)] = 0.997*[C(v)]+37.3 (n = 43, R(2) = 0.993) and [C(c)] = 0.941*[C(v)]+11.1 (n = 41, R(2) = 0.941), respectively. For non-pregnant adults, the equations are [C(c)] = 1.05*[C(v)]-117 (n = 32, R(2) = 0.958), [C(c)] = 0.962*[C(v)]+9.21 (n = 32, R(2) = 0.964) and [C(c)] = 1.04*[C(v)]-40.1 (n = 32, R(2) = 0.988), respectively. In summary, a linear relationship with a slope of ~1 was found for capillary and venous lumefantrine levels in children, pregnant women and non-pregnant adults at 2hr, 24hr and 120hr post last dose, representing absorption, distribution, and elimination phases. CONCLUSIONS: Capillary and venous plasma concentration of lumefantrine can be used interchangeably at 1:1 ratio. Capillary sampling method via finger prick is a suitable alternative for sample collection in clinical studies. Public Library of Science 2018-08-16 /pmc/articles/PMC6095545/ /pubmed/30114201 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0202082 Text en © 2018 Huang et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Huang, Liusheng
Mwebaza, Norah
Kajubi, Richard
Marzan, Florence
Forsman, Camilla
Parikh, Sunil
Aweeka, Francesca T.
Strong correlation of lumefantrine concentrations in capillary and venous plasma from malaria patients
title Strong correlation of lumefantrine concentrations in capillary and venous plasma from malaria patients
title_full Strong correlation of lumefantrine concentrations in capillary and venous plasma from malaria patients
title_fullStr Strong correlation of lumefantrine concentrations in capillary and venous plasma from malaria patients
title_full_unstemmed Strong correlation of lumefantrine concentrations in capillary and venous plasma from malaria patients
title_short Strong correlation of lumefantrine concentrations in capillary and venous plasma from malaria patients
title_sort strong correlation of lumefantrine concentrations in capillary and venous plasma from malaria patients
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6095545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30114201
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0202082
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