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Antiprotozoal Drugs Dr. Kaukab Azim Israa Omer
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Antiprotozoal Drugs

Jan 03, 2016

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Antiprotozoal Drugs. Dr. Kaukab Azim Israa Omer. Learning Objectives. Be able to relate the action of drugs with the life cycle of the organism. Be able to describe the mechanism of action of each drug in each drug group if known. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Antiprotozoal Drugs

Dr. Kaukab Azim

Israa Omer

Page 2: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Be able to recognize the main therapeutic uses of the drugs of each class

Be able to indicate the main contraindications of the drugs of each class if any

Be able to describe the adverse effects of the drugs of each class

Be able to describe the mechanism of action of each drug in each drug group if known

Be able to relate the action of drugs with the life cycle of the organism

Learning Objectives

Page 3: Antiprotozoal Drugs
Page 4: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Tissue

Schizonticides

Blood

Schizonticides

Gametocides

insect repellentsInsecticidesbed nets

Therapeutic options

Page 5: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Drugs used for treatment of Malaria

Page 6: Antiprotozoal Drugs

1. Chloroquine Phosphate

• Safe and low-cost • Rapidly absorbed through oral route• Very well tolerated even with prolonged use. • Highly effective blood schizonticide• Not effective liver stage parasites• Moderately gameticidal• Does not eliminate hypnozoites of P. vivax and

P. ovale(*. Exoerythrocytic schizozoite of Plasmodium vivax or P. ovale in the human liver, ..*)

Page 7: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Chloroquine is the drug of choice in the treatment of nonfalciparum and sensitive falciparum malaria

Page 8: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Mechanism of action

• It accumulates in the food vacuole of plasmodia and prevents polymerization of Hb

breakdown products heme into hemozoin.

• Intracellular accumulation of heme is toxic to parasite

Page 9: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Adverse effects• Pruritus is common, primarily in Africans.• Uncommon side effects:

- Peripheral neuropathy, - Retinal damage, - Auditory impairment, - Myocardial depression - Toxic psychosis

• It can also precipitates porphyria attack(*The porphyrias are a group of uncommon metabolic diseases caused by enzyme deficiencies within heme biosynthesis that lead to neurotoxic or phototoxic heme precursor accumulation.*)

• Dosing after meals reduces some adverse effects.

Page 10: Antiprotozoal Drugs

2. Quinine and quinidine

• First line drugs for severe form of P. falciparum malaria

• Highly effective blood schizonticide against all four types of plasmodia

• Gameticidal against P. vivax and P. ovale

• Not active against liver stage parasites

• MOA unknown

• Resistance uncommon

Page 11: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Mechanism of action

• It complexes with double stranded DNA to prevent strand separation, resulting in block of DNA replication and transcription to RNA.

• Quinine is solely a blood schizonticide .

Page 12: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Clinical uses

• IV quinidine standard therapy for severe P. falciparum malaria e.g. cerebral malaria

• Administered with cardiac monitoring

• Oral quinine sulphate + doxycycline (clindamycin in children) first line therapy for chloroquine-resistant uncomplicated falciparum malaria

Page 13: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Clinical uses

BABESIOSIS(*Babesiosis is a malaria-like parasitic disease caused by infection with .... Babesia microti uses the same tick(*Mites-small insect*) vector as Lyme disease and ehrlichiosis, and may ...*)

Quinine is first-line therapy, in combination with clindamycin, in the treatment of infection with Babesia microti or other human babesial infections

Page 14: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Adverse effects

• Cinchonism; Tinnitus, visual disturbances, dizziness, nausea, flushing, headache

• Rapid IV infusion leads to hypotension

• RBCs hemolysis in G6PD deficient patient, blackwater fever, is a rare fatal complication in quinine-sensitized person.

• Cardiotoxicity: ECG abnormalities with IV quinidine, hence cardiac monitoring

Page 15: Antiprotozoal Drugs

• Recommended chemoprophylactic drug for use in most malaria-endemic regions(particular region OR population) with chloroquine-resistant strains of P. falciparum.

• Strong blood schizonticide against P falciparum and P vivax

• but it is not active against hepatic stages or gametocytes.

• The mechanism of action of mefloquine is unknown.

• Resistance is uncommon (except Thailand)

3. Mefloquin

Page 16: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Adverse effects (More common with high doses)

• It can only be given orally because severe local irritation occurs with parenteral use

• Neuropsychiatric toxicities (depression, psychosis, confusion, or seizures – contraindicated if these are already present)

• nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, dizziness, headache.

• altered cardiac conduction, arrhythmias and bradycardia

Page 17: Antiprotozoal Drugs

4. Primaquin

• Effective against liver stage of all four species of plasmodia

• Drug of choice for the eradication of hypnozoites of P vivax and P ovale

• Gametocidal against all four species of plasmodia

• Weak blood schizonticidal activity

Page 18: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Mechanism of action• It forms quinoline-quinone metabolites, which are electron-

transferring redox compounds that act as cellular oxidants.• The drug is tissue schizonticide and also limits malaria

transmission by acting as gametocide.• (*Redox reactions, or oxidation-reduction reactions,

primarily involve the transfer of electrons between two chemical species. The compound that loses an electron is said to be oxidized, the one that gains an electron is said to be reduced. There are also specific terms that describe the specific chemical species. A compound that is oxidized is referred to as a reducing agent, while a compound that is reduced is referred to as the oxidizing agent.*)

Page 19: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Clinical uses

• For malaria – in combination with a blood schizonticide, usually chloroquine

• The combination of clindamycin and primaquine is an alternative regimen in the treatment of pneumocystosis (Pneumocystis jiroveci )

Page 20: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Adverse effects

• Generally well tolerated

• More common with higher dosage and when the drug is taken on an empty stomach

• Primaquine may cause hemolysis in persons with G6PD deficiency

• Infrequently causes nausea, abdominal cramps, and headache

• CI in pregnancy.

Page 21: Antiprotozoal Drugs

5. Atovaquone

• MOA? In plasmodia it appears to disrupt mitochondrial electron transport.

• It is a quinine derivative• Malarone, a combination of atovaquone and

proguanil, is highly effective for both the treatment and chemoprophylaxis of falciparum malaria, and it is now approved for both indications in the USA

Page 22: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Clinical uses

• Malaria – treatment and prophylaxis

• P jiroveci pneumonia. Mild to moderate cases.

• Adverse effects:

• Generally well tolerated.

• Abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, headache

Page 23: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Lecture No:26. Inhibitors of Folate synthesis

• Pyrimethamine

• Proguanil

• Both drugs act against erythrocytic forms of all four human malaria species.

• Both drugs also have some activity against hepatic forms of P. falciparum.

• Neither drug is effective against the persistent liver stages of P vivax or P ovale.

• Neither drug is adequately gametocidal

Page 24: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Clinical Uses

• MALARIA (uncomplicated cases only)

– Fansidar, a combination of sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine

• TOXOPLASMOSIS

• PNEUMOCYSTOSIS

Page 25: Antiprotozoal Drugs

7. Amodiaquine

• Closely related to chloroquine

• Probably shares mechanisms of action and resistance

• It is low cost

• Important toxicities

– agranulocytosis

– aplastic anemia

– hepatotoxicity

• World Health Organization lists amodiaquine plus artesunate as a recommended therapy for chloroquine resistant falciparum malaria in poor countries

Page 26: Antiprotozoal Drugs

8. Artemisinin, artemether, dihydroartemisinin

• Artemisinin and its derivatives are endoperoxide-containing compounds which represent a promising new class of antimalarial drugs

• In the presence of intra-parasitic iron, these drugs are converted into free radicals and other electrophilic intermediates which then alkylate specific malaria target proteins.

• Combinations of available derivatives and other antimalarial agents show promise both as first-line agents and in the treatment of severe disease

• It is not used as chemoprophylaxis because of the short half-life.

Page 27: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Drugs for amebiasis

• Tissue amebicide (chloroquine, emetine, metronidazole) act on organism in the bowel wall and the liver.

• Luminal amebicides(diloxinde furoate, idioquinol, paromomycin).

• For asymptomatic disease, diloxinde is the first choice.

• For mild to severe intestinal infection and amebic liver abcess metronidazole and tinidazole is used with luminal agent.

Page 28: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Metronidazole

• or tinidazole (better toxicity profile)• drug of choice in the treatment of extra-luminal

amebiasis • treatment of choice for giardiasis • treatment of choice for trichomoniasis• Oral metronidazole readily absorbed and permeates

all tissues by simple diffusion• It undergoes reductive bio-activation of its nitro

group by ferrodoxin to form reactive oxygen radical

Page 29: Antiprotozoal Drugs
Page 30: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Adverse effects• Nausea, headache, dry mouth, or a metallic taste in

the mouth occurs commonly • Nausea and vomiting can occur if alcohol is ingested

during therapy • Taking the drug with meals lessens gastrointestinal

irritation• Most serious adverse effect includes neutropenia,

dizziness and ataxia.

• Drug interaction includes disulfiram like reaction and potentiation of comarin anticoagulant effect.

Page 31: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Emetine

• Inhibit protein synthesis by blocking ribosomal movement along messenger RNA.

• Used as backup drugs for treatment of severe intestinal and liver amebiasis together with luminal agent in hospitalized patients.

• The drug can cause severe toxicity, including GI upset, muscle weakness, and cardiovascular dysfunction.

Page 32: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Diloxinde furoate

• Luminal Amebicides• Commonly used as the sole agent for the treatment of

asymptomatic amebiasis and is also useful in mild intestinal disease when used with other drug

• It is converted in the gut to diloxinde free base, which is active amebicide

• Toxic effect are mild restricted to GI symptoms and generally well tolerated

Page 33: Antiprotozoal Drugs

• Luminal Amebicides• Ninety percent of the drug is retained in the intestine and

excreted in the feces. • Active against trophozoites. • MOA - unknown• Active only in large bowel• Should be taken with meals to limit GIT toxicity • Adverse effects:

diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, headache and thyroid enlargment.

Iodoquinol

Page 34: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Paromomycin

• It is an aminoglycoside antibiotic used as a luminal agent and may be superior to diloxinde in asymptomatic infection.

• Not significantly absorbed from the GIT• MOA: inhibition of protein synthesis

• Adverse effects: abdominal pain and diarrhea.

Page 35: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Treatment of leishmaniasis• sodium stibogluconate (only injection)• For all forms of the disease; cutaneous, mucocutanous and

visceral leishmaniasis• MAO – inhibtion of glycolsis or effects on nucleic acid

metabolism• Adverse effects : it is potentially cardiotoxic (QT

prolongation).• IM injections very painful – lead to sterile abscesses• Alternative agents include pentamidine or miltofosine for

visceral disease, fluconazole or metronidzole for cutaneous lesions and amphotericinB for mucocutanous disease

Page 36: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Treatment of trypanosomiasis• Pentamidine:used to treat the hemolymphatic stage of

T.gambiense and T.rhodesiense .

The drug can not cross the BBB; so it is not used in the later stage of the disease

• Melarsoprol: inhibit enzyme sulfhydryl groups, it enter the CNS so it is the treatment of choice for African sleeping sickness .

The drug can cause reactive encephalopathy• Nifurtimox: drug of choice for American

trypanosomiasis

Page 37: Antiprotozoal Drugs

• Sumarin : used for early stage of African trypanosomiasis

• Eflornithine: suicide substrate for ornithine decarboxylase ,it is effective in some forms of african tryposomiasis, the drug can penetrate the BBB.

Page 38: Antiprotozoal Drugs

Good luck