8 research outputs found
Antimalarial Iron Chelator, FBS0701, Shows Asexual and Gametocyte Plasmodium falciparum Activity and Single Oral Dose Cure in a Murine Malaria Model
Iron chelators for the treatment of malaria have proven therapeutic activity in vitro and in vivo in both humans and mice, but their clinical use is limited by the unsuitable absorption and pharmacokinetic properties of the few available iron chelators. FBS0701, (S)3”-(HO)-desazadesferrithiocin-polyether [DADFT-PE], is an oral iron chelator currently in Phase 2 human studies for the treatment of transfusional iron overload. The drug has very favorable absorption and pharmacokinetic properties allowing for once-daily use to deplete circulating free iron with human plasma concentrations in the high µM range. Here we show that FBS0701 has inhibition concentration 50% (IC50) of 6 µM for Plasmodium falciparum in contrast to the IC50 for deferiprone and deferoxamine at 15 and 30 µM respectively. In combination, FBS0701 interfered with artemisinin parasite inhibition and was additive with chloroquine or quinine parasite inhibition. FBS0701 killed early stage P. falciparum gametocytes. In the P. berghei Thompson suppression test, a single dose of 100 mg/kg reduced day three parasitemia and prolonged survival, but did not cure mice. Treatment with a single oral dose of 100 mg/kg one day after infection with 10 million lethal P. yoelii 17XL cured all the mice. Pretreatment of mice with a single oral dose of FBS0701 seven days or one day before resulted in the cure of some mice. Plasma exposures and other pharmacokinetics parameters in mice of the 100 mg/kg dose are similar to a 3 mg/kg dose in humans. In conclusion, FBS0701 demonstrates a single oral dose cure of the lethal P. yoelii model. Significantly, this effect persists after the chelator has cleared from plasma. FBS0701 was demonstrated to remove labile iron from erythrocytes as well as enter erythrocytes to chelate iron. FBS0701 may find clinically utility as monotherapy, a malarial prophylactic or, more likely, in combination with other antimalarials
Cardiac R2* values are independent of the image analysis approach employed
Purpose: To determine whether systematic differences were
present between myocardial R2* values obtained with two different
decay models: truncation and exponential\ufeconstant
(Exp-C).
Methods: Single-center cohorts were used to compare black
and bright blood sequences separately, and a multicenter
cohort of mixed bright and black blood studies was used to
assess the generalizability. Truncated exponential estimates
were calculated with CMRtools, which uses a single region of
interest (ROI) method. Exp-C estimates were calculated using
a pixelwise approach.
Results: No differences could be distinguished based upon
whether a white or black blood sequence was examined. The
two fitting algorithms yielded similar R2* values, with Rsquared
values exceeding 0.997 and a coefficient of variation
of 3% to 4%. Results using the pixelwise method yielded a
small systematic bias (3%) that became apparent in patients
with severe iron deposition. This disparity disappeared when
Exp-C fitting was used on a single ROI, suggesting that the
use of pixelwise mapping was responsible for the bias. In the
multicenter cohort, the strong agreement between the two fitting
approaches was reconfirmed.
Conclusion: Cardiac R2* values are independent of the signal
model used for its calculation over clinically relevant ranges.
Clinicians can compare results among centers using these disparate
approaches with confidence
Fast approximation to pixelwise relaxivity maps: Validation in iron overloaded subjects
Purpose: Liver iron quantification by MRI has become routine. Pixelwise (PW) fitting to the iron-mediated
signal decay has some advantages but is slower and more vulnerable to noise than region-based
techniques. We present a fast, pseudo-pixelwise mapping (PPWM) algorithm.
Materials and Methods: The PPWM algorithm divides the entire liver into non-contiguous groups of pixels
sorted by rapid relative relaxivity estimates. Pixels within each group of like-relaxivity were binned and fit
using a Levenberg\u2013Marquadt algorithm.
Results: The developed algorithm worked about 30 times faster than the traditional PW approach and
generated R2* maps qualitatively and quantitatively similar. No systematic difference was observed in
median R2* values with a coefficient of variability (CoV) of 2.4%. Intra-observer and inter-observer errors
were also under 2.5%. Small systematic differences were observed in the right tail of the R2* distribution
resulting in slightly lower mean R2* values (CoV of 4.2%) and moderately lower SD of R2* values for the
PPWM algorithm. Moreover, the PPWM provided the best accuracy, giving a lower error of R2* estimates.
Conclusion: The PPWM yielded comparable reproducibility and higher accuracy than the TPWM. The
method is suitable for relaxivity maps in other organs and applications