Antimalarial Treatments 2023

Authored by
Staff
Last reviewed
July 20, 2023
Content Overview
Malaria antibody and antiparasite treatments are FDA approved in 2023.

Antimalarial Treatment July 2023

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Algorithm for the Diagnosis and Management of Malaria guides the recommended steps to treat malaria patients adequately. Malaria treatment should not be initiated until a diagnosis has been established by laboratory testing. However, presumptive treatment should be reserved for extreme circumstances, such as clinical suspicion of severe disease in a setting where prompt laboratory diagnosis is unavailable. Once malaria has been diagnosed, appropriate antimalarial treatment must be initiated immediately. Furthermore, the CDC's Malaria Treatment Tables guide malaria treatment, and options for treating pregnant women are presented in the Alternatives for Pregnant Women.

On July 20, 2023, the CDC presented Malaria Diagnosis and Treatment in the U.S. Beginning on slide #38, the CDC overviewed various malaria treatment options.

The World Health Organization's (WHO) recommendations on malaria elimination strategies could consist of mass drug administration, testing, treatment, or prevention of mass relapse. Mass strategies are generally not recommended for post-elimination settings unless there is a resumption of local malaria transmission. And the WHO published a Q&A developed by the Global Malaria Programme in collaboration with the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO). On June 20, 2023, the BMC Malaria Journal published a perspective: Real-life effectiveness of antimalarial treatment regimens: what are we aiming for?

Malaria Medications 2023

As of July 2023, four treatment options are available for P. falciparum infections acquired in areas with chloroquine resistance. These include artemether-lumefantrine (Coartem®), the preferred option if readily available, and atovaquone-proguanil (Malarone™), says the CDC. Options for the treatment of pregnant women are presented in the Alternatives for Pregnant Women.

Novartis and Medicines for Malaria Venture announced on November 23, 2022, their decision to move to Phase 3 study for a novel ganaplacide / lumefantrine-SDF combination in adults and children with malaria. Ganaplacide is a novel agent with a new mechanism of action combined with a new formulation of lumefantrine optimized for once-daily dosing. Pyramax® (pyronaridine-artesunate) was included in the WHO's list of pre-qualified medicines in 2012 and the WHO's Essential Medicines Lists for adults and children in 2017. Pyramax subsequently underwent a positive review by the WHO's Advisory Committee on the Safety of Medicinal Products in 2019, including interim data from the CANTAM study.

Ocean Biomedical has discovered a new therapeutic approach that could launch a new class of antimalarials. Promising results from the malaria program include a monoclonal antibody that kills 94%-99% of malaria parasites in culture and a small molecule drug that kills 100% of parasites at low nanomolar concentrations. 

Insight Partners published the latest research report on the Malaria Treatment global market is estimated to grow with a CAGR of 4.9% from 2022 to 2028.

Malaria Monoclonal Antibody 2023

Artesunate for Injection™ was FDA approved in May 2020 and is indicated for infants, children, adults, and pregnant women with severe malaria or those unable to tolerate oral antimalarials. Available in vials of 110mg, Artesunate for Injection is dosed at 2.4 mg/kg given intravenously at 0, 12, and 24 hours, then daily for up to seven days. If after 24 hours of Artesunate, the percent parasitemia is ≤ 1% and the patient can tolerate oral medications, the patient can be switched to an antimalarial regimen.

The Lancet Infectious Diseases published results from an NIAID phase 1 clinical study on January 25, 2023, that found the antimalarial monoclonal antibody CIS43LS conferred high protection against parasitemia at doses of 20 mg/kg or 40 mg/kg administered intravenously followed by controlled human malaria infection, providing evidence that this approach might be helpful to prevent malaria across several clinical use cases. The NEJM published an Original Article on October 31, 2022: Safety and Efficacy of a Monoclonal Antibody against Malaria in Mali. CONCLUSIONS - CIS43LS was protected against P. falciparum infection in phase 2 clinical trial over a 6-month malaria season without evident safety concerns. And in a related Editorial by Umberto D'Alessandro, M.D., Ph.D., currently, available interventions for malaria control are unlikely to achieve the vision of a malaria-free world. And the NEJM published on August 4, 2022, an ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Low-Dose Subcutaneous or Intravenous Monoclonal Antibody to Prevent Malaria. On October 18, 2022, the peer-review journal Cell published results from a phase 1 clinical trial that concluded: L9LS, a potent and safe antimalarial monoclonal antibody, demonstrated 88% protective efficacy against infection in a phase 1 trial in healthy adults.

Malaria Testing

Malaria tests can detect parasites in a person's blood.

Malaria Netting

On March 14, 2023, the WHO recommended a new class of long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs), combining mixtures of insecticides with different modes of action. The Lancet published results from a study in January 223 that found chlorfenapyr-pyrethroid LLINs provided greater protection from malaria than pyrethroid-only LLINs in an area with pyrethroid-resistant mosquitoes. Pyriproxyfen-pyrethroid LLINs conferred protection similar to pyrethroid-only LLINs. A study published by BMJ Global Health Journal suggests that LLINs reduced the incidence in the first year. However, of the 88 malaria-endemic countries that provided data for 2010–2020, 78 detected resistance to at least one insecticide class reported to the WHO in December 2022.

Malaria Vaccines

Malaria vaccines are approved for use in 2023

Malaria Outbreaks 2023

Various countries have confirmed malaria outbreaks in 2023.