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细胞色素P450 2D6活性的自然变化与磷酸伯氨喹治疗潜伏间日疟疟疾的治疗功效有何关联?
结果
在这项病例对照研究中,57例患者参与了伯氨喹根治急性间日疟疟疾的临床试验,研究发现:在直接观察高剂量伯氨喹治疗后的一年内,暴露于基因型确定或通过右美沙芬代谢表型测量的低含量细胞色素P450 2D6活性的受试者,其疟疾复发的可能性显著增加。
意义
细胞色素P450 2D6活性受损与伯氨喹治疗失败的高风险显著相关,这一发现表明细胞色素P450 2D6参与了治疗活性代谢物产生的过程。
Importance
Latent hepatic Plasmodium vivax hypnozoites provoke repeated clinical attacks called relapses. Only primaquine phosphate kills hypnozoites, and its therapeutic activity may depend on naturally polymorphic cytochrome P450 2D6 isotype (CYP2D6) activity.
Objective
To examine the association of impaired CYP2D6 genotypes and CYP2D6 metabolic phenotypes with therapeutic failure of directly observed high-dose primaquine treatment for P vivax malaria relapse.
Design, Setting, and Participants
Nested case-control study of patients who, in July 2014, completed a randomized clinical trial of directly observed primaquine treatment for radical cure of acute P vivax malaria in an area of Indonesia where reinfection during 1 year of posttreatment follow-up was improbable. A total of 177 of 180 patients with P vivax malaria completed the clinical trial of primaquine treatment to prevent relapse; 151 were eligible for recruitment as controls. After screening, 59 potential control individuals (no relapse) and 26 potential case patients (relapse) were considered, and 36 controls and 21 cases were enrolled.
Exposures
Cases and controls were exposed to P vivax malaria and primaquine therapy but had variable exposure to the enzymatic activity of CYP2D6, classified as impaired by a genotype-determined qualitative phenotype (poor or intermediate), genotype-determined activity score less than 1.5, or a log of the 24-hour pooled urine dextromethorphan-dextrorphan metabolic ratio greater than −1.0.
Main Outcomes and Measures
Unadjusted odds ratios (ORs) of relapse with impaired CYP2D6 metabolism determined by genotype or measured by urinary dextromethorphan-dextrorphan metabolic ratio.
Results
Among the 21 cases (mean [SD] age, 30.5 [6.3] years; all male) and 36 controls (mean [SD] age, 29.0 [3.6] years; all male), 6 CYP2D6 alleles (*1, *2, *4, *5, *10, and *41) occurred as 12 distinct genotypes, with model activity scores ranging from 0.0 to 2.0. Among 32 patients with genotypic activity scores of 1.0 or less, 18 had experienced relapse, whereas among the 25 with scores higher than 1.0, 3 had experienced relapse (OR, 9.4; 95% CI, 2.1-57.0; P = .001). When the log of the metabolic ratio of dextromethorphan-dextrorphan was −1.0 or less, only 1 of 18 patients experienced relapse, whereas above that threshold (consistent with low metabolic activity), 20 of 39 patients experienced relapse (OR, 18; 95% CI, 2.2-148.0; P = .007).
Conclusions and Relevance
Genotype-determined and directly measured impaired levels of CYP2D6 activity were associated with elevated risk of therapeutic failure. These findings suggest a natural variability in CYP2D6-dependent metabolism of primaquine as a key determinant of therapeutic efficacy against latent P vivax malaria.
The human malaria parasite Plasmodium vivax may be exposed to 2.8 billion people and causes infection in millions annually.1 Historically considered intrinsically benign, P vivax has recently been reported to be associated with severe anemia, severe thrombocytopenia, respiratory distress, renal or hepatic dysfunction, seizures or coma, and shock.2,3Plasmodium vivax malaria during early pregnancy has caused elevated risk of low birth weight, stillbirth, and spontaneous abortion.4 Prevention of such morbidity and mortality requires prompt diagnosis and effective chemotherapy.
This species, unlike the other major cause of human malaria, Plasmodium falciparum, activates dormant stages in the liver called hypnozoites derived from bradysporozoites inoculated by infectious anopheline mosquitoes. Each of the often multiple recurrent attacks caused by these hypnozoites in the weeks, months, and few years after infection create a risk of poor clinical outcomes and continued transmission. Among 2495 repatriated US soldiers infected by P vivax in the Pacific during World War II, the median number of attacks after removal from endemic areas was 10 to 14, with approximately equal minorities experiencing 1 to 3 or more than 20 attacks.5 A total of 90% to 96% of clinical attacks of P vivax in Thailand and 82% in Papua New Guinea, where P vivax infection is endemic, derived from an estimated 5 relapses per infectious event.6,7 Effective treatment of hypnozoites represents a therapeutic aim of great clinical and public health importance.8
Treatment of P vivax malaria requires distinct blood schizontocidal therapy against an acute attack and hypnozoitocidal therapy against latency.9 Chloroquine phosphate and primaquine phosphate have been those primary therapies since 1952. Primaquine is a problematic therapy, causing potentially fatal hemolytic anemia in patients with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency—an inherited X-linked abnormality that occurs in approximately 8% of people living at risk of malaria.10 Resistance to chloroquine by P vivax commonly occurs, and artemisinin-combined blood schizontocides are effective therapeutic options11; however, primaquine remains the only hypnozoitocidal option.
Ascertaining therapeutic success vs failure of primaquine is fraught with uncertainty. Potentially important confounding factors must be considered: (1) many pharmaceutical companies of variable standards manufacture primaquine; (2) unsupervised adherence to the 14-day regimen is notoriously poor; (3) many countries recommend a less effective, lower total adult dose (210 vs 420 mg) in mitigating risk of harm in G6PD deficiency; (4) no technology distinguishes relapses from new primary attacks; and (5) risk and timing of relapse vary widely among geographic regions.7
The complex metabolism of primaquine includes generation of highly reactive quinonimine metabolites via cytochrome P450 2D6 (CYP2D6) enzymatic activity12,13 linked to therapeutic activity against hepatic schizonts of rodent plasmodia.14 CYP2D6 pharmacogenetics has been extensively investigated as metabolizing approximately 20% of prescribed medicines.15-17 The identity and source of the primaquine metabolite active against hypnozoites in humans remain unknown, but intermediate or poor metabolizer CYP2D6 genotypes occurred with therapeutic failure in at least 3 patients not exposed to risk of reinfection during prolonged follow-up.18,19 Examining possible linkage of impaired CYP2D6 metabolism to primaquine treatment failure requires ruling out other likely causes. Patients given directly observed high-dose primaquine therapy and followed up for months free of reinfection are candidates for such studies.
In 2 clinical trials of primaquine in Indonesia, 252 patients received directly observed high-dose primaquine against latent P vivax infection, and 35 (13.9%) experienced relapse during a year of follow-up without risk of reinfection.20,21 In the current study, we evaluated CYP2D6 polymorphisms that occurred among patients of one of those trials.21 A nested case-control design used CYP2D6 genotyping22 and measurement of CYP2D6-dependent metabolism of dextromethorphan to dextrorphan23-25 among 21 of 26 patients who experienced relapse (cases) compared with a random sample of 36 of the 151 patients who did not experience relapse (controls). We thus assessed the risk of relapse associated with exposure to genotype-determined or measured impaired levels of CYP2D6 metabolic activity. Implication of the enzyme responsible for the hypnozoitocidal metabolite of primaquine represents a key step in understanding the molecular basis of this important chemotherapy and the causes of its frequent clinical failure.
At an Indonesian army base at Sragen, Central Java, Indonesia, during July 2014, patients successfully completing a randomized clinical trial of primaquine phosphate therapy (0.5 mg/kg daily for 14 days) against relapse of P vivax malaria acquired in eastern Indonesia21 were screened for this study. They had been randomized to receive blood schizontocidal therapy for the acute attack with artesunate, dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine, or artesunate-pyronaridine and were predominantly ethnic Javanese Indonesian men. Indonesia excludes women from duties within deployed infantry battalions; therefore, no women were available for enrollment in these studies. The Ethics Committee for Health Research, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia approved a protocol for this study on April 28, 2014. The Oxford Tropical Research Ethics Committee approved the protocol on May 8, 2014. The approved protocol describing this nested case-control study was registered on May 16, 2014.26 All patients provided written informed consent to participate in this study. The data were deidentified. This study accorded with the principles and provisions of the International Conference on Harmonisation Tripartite Guideline for Good Clinical Practice and the Declaration of Helsinki, whichever afforded greater protection of patients. Reporting of all aspects of this study adhered to the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) reporting guidelines for case-control studies.27
Study Design and Population
A nested case-control design assessed the risk of therapeutic failure of directly supervised high-dose primaquine therapy against relapse of P vivax infection associated with exposure to low CYP2D6 genotype–determined activity scores22 or CYP2D6-mediated metabolism of dextromethorphan.23-25 Cases experienced a relapse of P vivax malaria in the year after primaquine therapy during which reinfection did not occur. Unmatched, randomly selected controls were patients from the same trial who received the same treatments21 and did not experience relapse during 12 months of follow-up (eFigure 1 in the Supplement). Primaquine plasma concentrations from the clinical trial21 were measured and analyzed as detailed in the eAppendix in the Supplement.
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
All screened patients were healthy male soldiers who resided at the study site who successfully completed participation in the clinical trial of primaquine treatment.21 They were fully recovered from the malaria attacks that had occurred 3 to 10 months previously and were available and willing to spend 48 hours in the research ward. Ineligible patients were unavailable or unwilling to participate or had abnormal clinical or laboratory findings during screening. Cases and controls were selected for recruitment on the basis of primaquine failure or apparent success, respectively. A total of 177 of 180 patients with P vivax malaria completed the clinical trial of primaquine against relapse; 151 were eligible for recruitment as controls. After screening, 59 potential controls (no relapse) and 26 potential cases (relapse) were considered. Among the 26 patients eligible for recruitment as cases, 2 were absent, 3 declined consent, and 21 volunteered. Among the 151 patients eligible as controls, a computer-randomized listing guided recruitment in listed order until 36 volunteered and successfully enrolled: 59 were approached, but 19 were absent, 2 had abnormal laboratory findings, and 2 declined consent (eFigure 1 in the Supplement). Absence occurred as a result of authorized leave or reassignment to another military unit. Patients were assigned generic study numbers without regard to case or control identity to mask the laboratory teams later assigned to analyze the specimens in Jakarta, Indonesia.
Quantitative exposure to primaquine in the clinical trial was estimated from plasma concentrations of primaquine obtained from population pharmacokinetic sampling regimens during that trial.21 The methods of high-performance liquid chromatography measurement and mathematical modeling of the area under the curve for primaquine are detailed in the eAppendix in the Supplement essentially as described elsewhere.28-30
Patient DNA was isolated and purified from venous blood samples using a QIAamp DNA Mini Kit (Qiagen). After ascertainment of concentration (NanoDrop2000; Thermo Scientific) and purity (A260/A280) of the DNA samples, CYP2D6 genotyping was performed using xTAG CYP2D6 kit, version 3 (Luminex).18 The kit probed sequences specific to *1, *2, *3, *4, *5, *6, *7, *8, *9, *10, *11, *15, *17, *29, *35, and *41 alleles. Manufacturer’s instructions were followed using a 9700 thermal cycler (PE Applied Biosystems) and the Luminex 200 xMAP instrument. xTAG Data Analysis Software analyzed the fluorometric readout and recorded CYP2D6 allelic identity. CYP2D6 genotype identified levels of enzymatic activity qualitatively by the genotyping kit manufacturer’s guidance (poor, intermediate, extensive, or ultra) or by the activity score model described by Gaedigk et al,22 with alleles scored as 0.0, 0.5, or 1.0. The sum of the 2 alleles gave activity scores of 0.0, 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, or 2.0 as individual predicted activity score phenotypes.
CYP2D6 Dextromethorphan Metabolizer Phenotype
Enrollment in this study immediately commenced after the conclusion of the clinical trial of primaquine,21 with 6 cohorts of approximately 10 patients being admitted to a temporary 10-bed research ward within the health clinic that served the army base. Admission was followed by a supervised, 24-hour, water-only fast as recommended.24 Supervised administration of 2 tablets each that contained 15 mg of dextromethorphan hydrobromide (Kimia Farma) then occurred, and patients were kept in the ward for another 24 hours with normal meals and liquids.23-25 Urine output from each patient during that period was collected as a pooled sample. Discharge from the ward at that time marked the end of participation. Urine samples were transferred to Jakarta, stored at −80°C, and analyzed by liquid chromatography for dextromethorphan and dextrorphan essentially as described elsewhere,31,32 with details provided in the eAppendix in the Supplement.
In the instance of both CYP2D6 genotype–determined activity score and the measured dextromethorphan-dextrorphan metabolic ratio, we aimed to estimate risk of relapse at given thresholds of CYP2D6 activity separating impaired from normal drug metabolism. Those thresholds were set as poor or intermediate vs extensive or ultrametabolizers (genotype-determined qualitative phenotype), a genotype-determined metabolizer activity score phenotype less than 1.5, and a log metabolic ratio of dextromethorphan-dextrorphan greater than −1.0. Genotype-determined activity scores of 0.0, 0.5, and 1.0 derive from genotypes almost universally classified qualitatively as poor or intermediate metabolizers, and those of 1.5 or greater are classified as extensive or ultrametabolizers.22 A population survey of 660 white and African American patients found 66 patients with urinary log dextromethorphan-dextrorphan metabolic ratios of −1.0 or higher (ie, the lowest 10% of expressed CYP2D6 metabolic activity values).22 We thus considered the applied thresholds of impaired vs normal CYP2D6 activity as objectively valid.
Three outcomes were assessed: (1) odds ratios (ORs) for relapse among patients classified as poor or intermediate metabolizers according to the CYP2D6 genotyping kit compared with those classified as extensive or ultrametabolizers; (2) OR for relapse among patients with a genotype-determined activity score of 1.0 or less compared with those with higher scores; and (3) OR for relapse among patients with a log metabolic ratio of dextromethorphan to dextrorphan of greater than −1.0 compared with those with greater dextrorphan metabolism.
Unadjusted ORs (95% CIs) were calculated with the Fisher exact test to determine the association among the CYP2D6 phenotype, CYP2D6 genotype, and log10 metabolic ratio of dextromethorphan to dextrorphan between patients who did and did not experience relapse. The Mann-Whitney U test was performed to compare the differences in mean genotype-determined activity scores between patients who did and did not experience relapse. Statistical analysis was performed using Stata software, version 12 (StataCorp). Two-sided P < .05 was considered to be significant in all analyses.
The study included 21 cases (mean [SD] age, 30.5 [6.3] years; all male) and 36 controls (mean [SD] age, 29.0 [3.6] years; all male). Table 1 summarizes the essential demographic, clinical, and laboratory characteristics of the study participants. With regard to race/ethnicity, body weight, parasite counts at enrollment in the clinical trial, and blood schizontocidal treatment assignment, no statistically significant differences emerged. Patients who weighed less than 70 kg received a daily dose of 30 mg of primaquine, whereas those above that threshold received 45 mg; the number of controls who received the higher dose (20 of 36) was significantly higher than the number of cases (5 of 21) (P = .03). Nonetheless, no significant differences in primaquine population pharmacokinetic area under the curve values occurred between controls and cases (32.2 vs 32.6 μg · h/mL, P = .29) (Table 1). Primaquine exposure among cases and controls appeared to be equal and not dissimilar from that of the clinical trial population as a whole (eAppendix, eTable 1, and eTable 2 in the Supplement). Primaquine treatment failures occurred among all 3 randomized blood schizontocidal regimens, and all were represented equally among cases and controls (Table 1).
No correlation appeared between weight of cases and week of relapse (r = 0.1644; P = .23). An analysis of relapse risk stratified by weight and exposure to a total dose of primaquine phosphate of 420 mg (body weight <70 kg) vs 630 mg (body weight ≥70 kg) found no significant difference in frequency of relapse (15 of 32 vs 6 of 25; OR, 2.8; 95% CI, 0.88-8.83; P = .08). There was a higher frequency of impaired metabolizers among patients who weighed less than 70 kg (83 of 94 [88%]) compared with individuals who weighed more (48 of 86 [56%]) (P = .01).
Odds of Relapse With Exposure to Impaired CYP2D6 Genotype
Table 2 summarizes the 12 distinct CYP2D6 genotypes found among the 57 patients evaluated. The OR of relapse with a classification of poor or intermediate CYP2D6 metabolizer phenotype derived was 7.5 (95% CI, 1.8-36; P = .002) compared with a classification of extensive metabolizer (Table 3). Six CYP2D6 alleles (*1, *2, *4, *5, *10, and *41) occurred as 12 distinct genotypes, with model activity scores ranging from 0.0 to 2.0. Among 32 patients with genotypic activity scores of 1.0 or less, 18 had experienced relapse, whereas among the 25 with scores higher than 1.0, 3 had experienced relapse. The OR for relapse with an activity score of 1.0 or less was 9.4 (95% CI, 2.1-57.0; P = .001) compared with a score of 1.5 or higher (Table 3 and eAppendix and eFigure 2 in the Supplement). The timing of postprimaquine relapse did not correlate with genotype-determined activity scores (eAppendix and eFigure 3A in the Supplement).
Odds of Relapse With Exposure to Impaired CYP2D6 Phenotype
The Figure illustrates individual patient values derived from the 24-hour pooled urine sample for the log metabolic ratio of dextromethorphan to dextrorphan. An analysis of correlation between genotype-determined activity score and log metabolic ratio of urinary dextromethorphan to dextrorphan proved to be highly significant (Spearman correlation coefficient = −0.683; P < .001) (eAppendix and eFigure 4 in the Supplement). The Figure illustrates the occurrence of 20 of 21 cases above the log metabolic ratio of dextromethorphan to dextrorphan of −1.0, along with 19 controls. Conversely, 18 patients had values below that threshold and 17 were controls. When the log of the metabolic ratio of dextromethorphan-dextrorphan was −1.0 or less, only 1 of 18 patients experienced relapse, whereas above that threshold (consistent with low metabolic activity), 20 of 39 patients experienced relapse. Patients with dextromethorphan to dextrorphan ratios greater than −1.0 were 18 times more likely to experience relapse than were those with ratios of −1.0 or less (95% CI, 2.2-148.0; P = .007) (Table 3). No correlation was found between urinary log metabolic ratio of dextromethorphan to dextrorphan and day of relapse (eAppendix and eFigure 3B in the Supplement).
Impaired CYP2D6 polymorphisms occurred in 20 of 21 Indonesian patients who experienced therapeutic failure of primaquine against relapse of P vivax malaria. These impaired polymorphisms were comparatively infrequent among patients with apparent therapeutic successes; 19 of 36 patients (OR of 18.0; 95% CI, 2.2-148.0; P = .007) had impaired CYP2D6 dextromethorphan-dextrorphan metabolizer phenotype. Impaired CYP2D6, whether identified by a genotype activity score less than 1.5 or a measured dextromethorphan-dextrorphan log metabolic ratio greater than −1.0, was associated with risk of primaquine therapeutic failure against relapse of P vivax malaria in this study, a finding that corroborates a large body of clinical and laboratory work posing and testing that hypothesis.12
These findings bear directly on treatment practice for patients with P vivax malaria. A single patient represented the null metabolizer genotype (*4/*5) and phenotype (log dextromethorphan to dextrorphan ratio >0) and experienced relapse. Any dose of primaquine in such patients may be futile against relapse, but among the 19 other cases classified as CYP2D6 impaired, higher or repeated doses would perhaps prove to be effective. Only 5 other patients had *4 or *5 alleles (4 of them did not experience relapse), but the sample of 36 controls included 28 (78%) who expressed the impaired *10 allele, as commonly appears in other Asian populations.33 This small sample of controls may or may not represent these allele frequencies among Javanese or other Indonesian ethnic groups, but the high frequency of *10 gives cause for concern regarding risk of therapeutic failure of primaquine against relapse in P vivax malaria caused by impaired metabolism. Daily doses of 0.5 mg/kg of primaquine in studies of primary chemoprophylaxis in travelers as long as 50 weeks were safe and well tolerated in nonfasted G6PD-normal and nonpregnant patients.34 Extending treatment beyond 14 days against relapse in patients with impaired (but not null) CYP2D6 activity may provide improved and sufficient efficacy with good safety and tolerability.
Routine screening of CYP2D6 genotypes in patients with P vivax malaria is not currently practical because of the high cost and technical expertise required. Populations in areas of endemicity who carry high frequencies of impaired CYP2D6 alleles would likely benefit from prolonged primaquine treatment as standard of care. However, such prolonged treatment could incur elevated risk of harm in undiagnosed G6PD-deficient patients and may also be impractical in terms of adequate adherence. In the broad context of P vivax malaria as it occurs in most people very often living in impoverished and isolated locations that lack laboratory services, the already substantial numbers of people who cannot receive safe and effective therapy against latent P vivax malaria thus further expands.35
These findings suggest that primaquine is a prodrug dependent on the CYP2D6 isozyme to generate a therapeutically active metabolite. When natural polymorphism of CYP2D6 resulted in null or impaired metabolism, risk of relapse increased substantially. This problem appeared to explain almost all therapeutic failures of primaquine against relapse of P vivax malaria acquired in eastern Indonesia by Indonesian patients. The single patient who experienced relapse despite seemingly normal CYP2D6 genotype and CYP2D6 phenotype and adequate exposure to primaquine may represent rare evidence of apparently infrequent (<1% in the current trial) parasite resistance to primaquine. In patients able to adequately metabolize primaquine, this drug seems to retain high efficacy after 66 years of continuous clinical use as the sole therapeutic option against relapse of P vivax malaria.
Some controls may have lacked hypnozoites at the time of treatment with primaquine and would have been misclassified as treatment successes. Among patients in the clinical trials20,21 not treated with primaquine, 22% did not experience relapse. Inclusion of patients who lacked hypnozoites as controls would bias the OR for relapse associated with impaired CYP2D6 downward; thus, we considered the measured risk estimates to be conservative. The CYP2D6 genotyping kit manufacturer’s instructions warn of erroneous default common allele calls with rare alleles, and the populations surveyed for design of those genetic probes included ethnic Japanese and Han Chinese as the only Asian people represented. We are not aware of any surveys of CYP2D6 alleles among ethnic Javanese and thus cannot know the likelihood of rare allele misclassification by this method.
More than 90% of the global burden of P vivax malaria occurs in South and Southeast Asia,1 regions of great human genetic and ethnic diversity. CYP2D6 allele diversity and frequencies in these regions have not been adequately surveyed. The likely effects of potentially high frequencies of impaired CYP2D6 metabolism alleles merit those assessments with regard to technical strategies for striving to eliminate P vivax malaria from the whole of the Asia-Pacific region. Preventing relapse in patients diagnosed with P vivax malaria is an essential element of the responsible clinical and public health management of this infection.8 Alternative chemotherapeutic or chemoprophylactic strategies for managing risk of relapse in patients unable to receive or benefit from primaquine therapy (G6PD-unknown patients, G6PD-deficient patients, pregnant women, lactating mothers, young infants, and CYP2D6-impaired patients) have not been conceived, optimized, or validated. Preventing relapse without 8-aminoquinoline treatment should be considered to be a neglected gap in malaria chemotherapeutics that is in urgent need of attention.
Accepted for Publication: April 28, 2018.
Published: August 31, 2018. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2018.1449
Open Access: This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License. © 2018 Baird JK et al. JAMA Network Open.
Corresponding Author: J. Kevin Baird, PhD, Eijkman-Oxford Clinical Research Unit, Eijkman Institute of Molecular Biology, Jalan Diponegoro No. 69, Jakarta 10430, Indonesia (kevin.baird@ndm.ox.ac.uk)
Author Contributions: Dr Baird had full access to all the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.
Concept and design: Baird, Wesche, Sutanto.
Acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data: Baird, Louisa, Noviyanti, Ekawati, Elyazar, Subekti, Chand, Gayatri, Instiaty, Soebianto, Crenna-Darusallam, Djoko, Hasto, Mariyenes, Wesche, Nelwan, Sudoyo, Setiabudy.
Drafting of the manuscript: Baird, Ekawati, Elyazar, Gayatri, Djoko, Hasto, Mariyenes.
Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: Baird, Louisa, Noviyanti, Subekti, Chand, Instiaty, Soebianto, Crenna-Darusallam, Wesche, Nelwan, Sutanto, Sudoyo, Setiabudy.
Statistical analysis: Ekawati, Elyazar.
Obtained funding: Baird.
Administrative, technical, or material support: Louisa, Noviyanti, Ekawati, Subekti, Gayatri, Instiaty, Soebianto, Crenna-Darusallam, Djoko, Hasto, Mariyenes, Wesche, Sutanto, Sudoyo.
Supervision: Baird, Noviyanti, Ekawati, Djoko, Hasto, Mariyenes, Nelwan, Sutanto.
Conflict of Interest Disclosures: Dr Baird reports that his laboratory received research fund support from GlaxoSmithKline (United Kingdom) for the conduct of a clinical trial of dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine combined with tafenoquine vs primaquine for radical cure of acute Plasmodium vivax malaria in Indonesian soldiers. No other disclosures were reported.
Funding/Support: This study was supported by an award from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Medicines for Malaria Venture to the ALERTAsia Foundation.
Role of the Funder/Sponsor: The funding sources had no role in the design and conduct of the study; collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data; preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript; and decision to submit the manuscript for publication.
Additional Contributions: Asep Sutisna, Damian Oyong, BSc, Wahyu Nurfitriana, Winarni Arimanunggal, BSc, and Yulia Widay Santy, MSc, of the clinical research team at the Sragen, Central Java, study site and Agus, BA, Chiswyta Chaliana, BSc, Dedi Sudiana, Farah N. Courtrier, PhD, Fitria Wulandari, BA, Hasan Basri, MD, Jeny, BSc, Lia Waslia, BSc, Mario Vernandez, BSc, Mewahyu Dewi, MSc, Nunung Nuraini, MSc, and Ungke Antonjaya, MSc, at the research laboratories at the Eijkman Institute of Molecular Biology and the Faculty of Medicine University of Indonesia provided support with the research and were not compensated for their work. The soldiers and commanders of Battalion 408 of the Army of the Republic of Indonesia supported the clinical research team during their extended stay at the Sragen base, especially LTC Efdal Azra, BA, LTC Sugianto, MD, 1LT Heri Puji Winarto, BA, 1LT Noor Amiruudin, BA, CSM Agung Wahyu Pratama, 1SGT Andika Ratin Bawono, 1SGT Sutarti, 1SGT Iwan Setiawan, 1SGT Suparjan, SSGT Joko Murdianto, SSGT Pardiyanto, CPL Andrianto, CPL Sumarsono, PFC Arif Hidayat, PFC Wahyu Dwi Aryana, PFC Oki Purwanto, PFC Putra Ujian Jaya, PFC Danur Hidayanto, PFC Umar Triwara, PFC Singgih Nugroho, and PFC Ary Thonang Panglipur; these individuals were not compensated. Bimandra Djaafara, MSc (Eijkman-Oxford Clinical Research Unit), contributed to statistical analyses and data tables and graphs without compensation. Janice Culpepper, PhD (Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation), and Jeorg Moehrle, MD (Medicines for Malaria Venture), provided technical and administrative assistance without compensation. Claudia Surjadjaja, DrPH, and Shanti Gayatri, MA (ALERTAsia Foundation, Jakarta), received and managed the funds that made this study possible and were not compensated. Joel Tarning, PhD (Mahidol-Oxford Research Unit, Bangkok, Thailand), provided technical advice and assistance regarding the primaquine pharmacokinetics without compensation. Alan J. Magill, MD (deceased; formerly Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation), provided support and expertise without compensation .David J. Flockhart, MD (deceased; formerly University of Indiana), instructed and advised the authors and was compensated.
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