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    J Med Chem. 2008 Feb 28;51(4):1035-42. Epub 2008 Jan 31.

    Malaria-infected mice are cured by oral administration of new artemisinin derivatives.

    Posner GH, Chang W, Hess L, Woodard L, Sinishtaj S, Usera AR, Maio W, Rosenthal AS, Kalinda AS, D'Angelo JG, Petersen KS, Stohler R, Chollet J, Santo-Tomas J, Snyder C, Rottmann M, Wittlin S, Brun R, Shapiro TA.

    Department of Chemistry, School of Arts and Sciences, The Johns Hopkins University, 3400 North Charles Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21218-2685, USA. ghp@jhu.edu

    In four or five chemical steps from the 1,2,4-trioxane artemisinin, a new series of 23 trioxane dimers has been prepared. Eleven of these new trioxane dimers cure malaria-infected mice via oral dosing at 3 x 30 mg/kg. The clinically used trioxane drug sodium artesunate prolonged mouse average survival to 7.2 days with this oral dose regimen. In comparison, animals receiving no drug die typically on day 6-7 postinfection. At only 3 x 10 mg/kg oral dosing, seven dimers prolong the lifetime of malaria-infected mice to days 14-17, more than double the chemotherapeutic effect of sodium artesunate. Ten new trioxane dimers at only a single oral dose of 30 mg/kg prolong mouse average survival to days 8.7-13.7, and this effect is comparable to that of the fully synthetic trioxolane drug development candidate OZ277, which is in phase II clinical trials.

    PMID: 18232653 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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