| New
Drugs Raise Hopes for Sleeping Sickness
Two new treatments
for one of Africa's most deadly and neglected diseases may
soon replace current options, which are either life-threatening
or cumbersome to administer.
The Drugs for Neglected Disease Initiative
(DNDi), a publicprivate partnership, has announced two
potential treatments for sleeping sickness (African trypanosomiasis)
one ready to be rolled out to patients and one ready
for clinical trials in humans.
Drugs in use at the moment are either
toxic or difficult to administer. Melarsoprol, an arsenic-based
drug, is painful and kills one in twenty patients. Eflornithine,
on the other hand, must be given by infusion every two hours
for 14 days almost impossible in the under-resourced
health systems where sleeping sickness is common.
One of the new treatments, Nifurtimox
eflornithine combination therapy (NECT), is infused only twice
a day for just ten days. The WHO has approved it and affected
countries are ready to start using it, according to Els Torreele,
senior project manager at DNDi.
But the ultimate goal is to produce a
simple treament, says Torreele. Fexinidazole a simple
pill will be tested in health volunteers in Paris this
year before researchers test it on patients in Africa.
"There has never been quite so much
optimism," says Torreele.
The UK's Department for International
Development announced last week (15 May) that it would contribute
£18 million (US$28 million ) to advance DNDi's work
in the area.
Source: SciDev.net
Date: 18
May , 2009

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