lumefantrine has been researched along with artemisin* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for lumefantrine and artemisin
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Malaria treatment failures after artemisinin-based therapy in three expatriates: could improved manufacturer information help to decrease the risk of treatment failure?
Artemisinin-containing therapies are highly effective against Plasmodium falciparum malaria. Insufficient numbers of tablets and inadequate package inserts result in sub-optimal dosing and possible treatment failure. This study reports the case of three, non-immune, expatriate workers with P. falciparum acquired in Africa, who failed to respond to artemisinin-based therapy. Sub-therapeutic dosing in accordance with the manufacturers' recommendations was the probable cause.. Manufacturers information and drug content included in twenty-five artemisinin-containing specialities were reviewed.. A substantial number of manufacturers do not follow current WHO recommendations regarding treatment duration and doses.. This study shows that drug packaging and their inserts should be improved. Topics: Adult; Antimalarials; Artemether; Artemisinins; Artesunate; Cote d'Ivoire; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drug Labeling; Ethanolamines; Female; Fluorenes; Guidelines as Topic; Guinea; Humans; Lactones; Lumefantrine; Malaria, Falciparum; Parasitemia; Recurrence; Risk; Sesquiterpenes; Sudan; Switzerland; Treatment Failure; World Health Organization | 2006 |
The cost of uncomplicated childhood fevers to Kenyan households: implications for reaching international access targets.
Fever is the clinical hallmark of malaria disease. The Roll Back Malaria (RBM) movement promotes prompt, effective treatment of childhood fevers as a key component to achieving its optimistic mortality reduction goals by 2010. A neglected concern is how communities will access these new medicines promptly and the costs to poor households when they are located in rural areas distant to health services.. We assemble data developed between 2001 and 2002 in Kenya to describe treatment choices made by rural households to treat a child's fever and the related costs to households. Using a cost-of-illness approach, we estimate the expected cost of a childhood fever to Kenyan households in 2002. We develop two scenarios to explore how expected costs to households would change if more children were treated at a health care facility with an effective antimalarial within 48 hours of fever onset.. 30% of uncomplicated fevers were managed at home with modern medicines, 38% were taken to a health care facility (HCF), and 32% were managed at home without the use of modern medicines. Direct household cash expenditures were estimated at $0.44 per fever, while the total expected cost to households (cash and time) of an uncomplicated childhood fever is estimated to be $1.91. An estimated mean of 1.42 days of caretaker time devoted to each fever accounts for the majority of household costs of managing fevers. The aggregate cost to Kenyan households of managing uncomplicated childhood fevers was at least $96 million in 2002, equivalent to 1.00% of the Kenyan GDP. Fewer than 8% of all fevers were treated with an antimalarial drug within 24 hours of fever onset, while 17.5% were treated within 48 hours at a HCF. To achieve an increase from 17.5% to 33% of fevers treated with an antimalarial drug within 48 hours at a HCF (Scenario 1), children already being taken to a HCF would need to be taken earlier. Under this scenario, direct cash expenditures would not change, and total household costs would fall slightly to $1.86 because caretakers also save time with prompt treatment if the child has malaria.. The management of uncomplicated childhood fevers imposes substantial costs on Kenyan households. Achieving substantial improvements in the numbers of fevers treated within 48 hours at a HCF with an effective antimalarial drug (Scenario 1) will not impose additional costs on households. Achieving additional improvements in fevers treated promptly at a HCF (Scenario 2) will impose additional costs on some households roughly equal to average cash expenses for transportation to a HCF. Additional financing mechanisms that further reduce the costs of accessing care at a HCF and/or that make artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) accessible for home management need to be developed and evaluated as a top priority. Topics: Antimalarials; Artemisinins; Caregivers; Child, Preschool; Cost of Illness; Drug Therapy, Combination; Ethanolamines; Family Characteristics; Fever; Fluorenes; Health Care Surveys; Health Expenditures; Health Services Accessibility; Home Nursing; Humans; Infant; Kenya; Lactones; Lumefantrine; Malaria; Models, Econometric; Rural Health Services; Sesquiterpenes; Time Factors | 2006 |