To the Editor
The title of the letter by Cojean et al. (1) is misleading. The data presented essentially point to an absence of in vitro resistance to dihydroartemisinin (dhART) in the panel of African isolates studied, with 1 of 397 isolates having an elevated 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) for dhART. The S769N PfATPase6 mutation associated with in vitro resistance to artemether (2) was observed in 1 isolate. This mutant isolate had a low IC50 for dhART, but its IC50 for artemether has not been tested. Since the relationship between in vitro susceptibility to artemether and dhART is still uncertain (3), these data do not disprove the association of a PfATPase6 S769N polymorphism with elevated IC50 for artemether that was observed in isolates from French Guiana (2).
Worth noting is that the association of the S769N PfATPase6 polymorphism with elevated IC50 for artemether was confirmed in an isolate collected in French Guiana in 2005; that isolate had an IC50 for artemether of 127 nmol/L. Molecular typing identified 2 clonal types, 1 with a wild-type PfATPase6 allele and 1 with a S769N single mutant. After 3 weeks of in vitro cultivation without drug, the mutant allele was no longer detected and the IC50 for artemether was 8.2 nmol/L. This finding suggests poor fitness of the mutant allele under standard culture conditions.
The observation of an additional case of in vitro resistance to artemether in French Guiana 3 years after the first cases is of concern. Reinforcement of surveillance is needed as is clarification of the relationship of in vitro susceptibility to artemether and artesunate, the derivatives currently included in artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs). Surveillance and clarification would be particularly timely since emerging clinical or parasitologic failures to some ACTs have been reported (4,5).
Footnotes
Suggested citation for this article: Legrand E, Volney B, Meynard J-B, Esterre P, Mercereau-Puijalon O. Resistance to dihydroartemisinin (reply) [letter]. Emerg Infect Dis [serial on the Internet]. 2007 May [date cited]. Available from http://www.cdc.gov/eid/content/13/5/808.htm
References
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