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Ivermectin mass drug administration to humans as a potential tool for malaria elimination Kevin Kobylinski1,2, Alongkot Ponlawat2, Ratawan Ubalee2, Brian Foy3, Joel Tarning4, Thanaporn Wattanakul4, MAJ Wes McCardle2, CDR Dan Szumlas1, and LTC Jason Richardson1,2,5 [email protected] 1 Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR): Entomology Branch 2 Armed Forces Research Institute of Medical Sciences (AFRIMS): Department of Entomology 3 Colorado State University: Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology 4 Mahidol-Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit 5 Armed Forces Pest Management Board Effect of ivermectin in an African context Ivermectin MDA reduces the proportion of wild P. falciparum-infectious An. gambiae (www.mectizan.org) Mean percent P. falciparum infectious An. gambiae (Kobylinski) Background • Ivermectin is an extremely safe oral drug, with over 300 million treatments distributed annually by mass drug administration (MDA) for onchocerciasis and lymphatic filariasis elimination in Africa and Latin America • Ivermectin can reduce the survivorship of African Anopheles including: An. gambiae (Chaccour et al. 2010, Sylla et al. 2010, Ouédraogo et al. 2014), An. arabiensis (Fritz et al. 2012), and An. funestus (Ouédraogo et al. 2014), suppresses P. falciparum transmission (Kobylinski et al. 2011, Alout et al. 2014) and effects four out of five variables in the vectorial capacity equation (see right figures) • A recent clinical trial showed that ivermectin is safe and well tolerated when administered with artemther-lumefantrine (Ouédraogo et al. 2014), and modelling efforts predict that ivermectin MDA coupled with artemisinin combination therapy (ACT) MDA in Africa would accelerate elimination efforts (Slater et al. 2014) • Ivermectin can reduce the survivorship of Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) Anopheles including: An. dirus, An. minimus, An. campestris, and An. sawadwongporni (see below) • Ivermectin MDA fulfills many of the demands for novel vector control interventions put forth by the Malaria Eradication Research Agenda Consultative Group on Vector Control (Alonso et al. 2011) including: a different mode of action from currently used insecticides, it targets both indoor- and outdoor-feeding Anopheles, an avoidance of behavioral resistance mechanisms, an integration with current vector control tools, and it alters the mosquito population age structure (Alout et al. 2014) • Ivermectin MDA directly targets exophagic and endophagic human-feeding Anopheles regardless of feeding time, thus it could be a powerful new tool to aid the current artemisinin-resistance containment in the GMS and malaria elimination efforts worldwide m a2 p n b V= -lnp Time relative to MDA (days) Ivermectin ingestion delays the time to re-feed in An. gambiae *Treatment x time was significant (χ2 = 25.89, P < 0.0001). Mean sporozoite rate in control villages did not differ significantly (P=1, while the sporozoite rate significantly reduced the first (P = 0.0074) and second (P=0.0018) weeks after MDA (Alout et al. 2014) Ivermectin (LC25) inhibits the sporogony of P. falciparum in An. gambiae * Vectorial Capacity V – average number of potentially infective bites that will be delivered by all vectors feeding on a single host in one day p – daily probability of adult mosquito survivorship a – daily probability an Anopheles feeds on a human (human bloodmeal index x feeding frequency) n – duration of the extrinsic incubation period b – vector competence (ie. proportion of Anopheles that ingest Plasmodium and successfully become infectious) m – vector density in relation to the host * * (χ2 = 23.83, P < 0.0001, Hazard ratio = 7.656 [3.487, 18.63]) (Kobylinski et al. 2010) 7 Oocyst DDPI Stage χ2= 15.48, P = 0.0002 12 Sporozoite χ2= 13.47, P = 0.0003 14 Sporozoite χ2= 19.96, P < 0.0001 (Kobylinski et al. 2012) Effect of ivermectin in a Greater Mekong Subregion context GMS Anopheles LC50 ( ) and LC25 ( ) values plotted on model estimates 60 = LC5 Model estimates for 200, 400, 800 μg/kg doses 180 40 30 20 10 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 0 dirus n=5029, r=6 sawadwongporni campestris n=1431, r=4 n=2786, r=4 minimus n=2376, r=6 0 gambiae n=2013, r=8 (reference) • Various concentrations of ivermectin were blood fed to An. dirus, An. sawadwongporni, An. campestris and An. minimus via membrane feeders • Mosquito survivorship was monitored for seven days • A non-linear mixed model (Kobylinski et al. 2010) was used to estimate the lethal concentration that killed 50, 25, and 5 (LC50, LC25, LC5) percent of mosquitoes Number of oocysts per An. dirus Sporontocidal impact of ivermectin on P. vivax in An. dirus 1 2 1180 80 200 D oμg/kg se=200 1160 60 400 D oμg/kg se=400 1140 40 800 D oμg/kg se=800 1120 20 1100 00 8800 6600 4400 2200 00 3 4 0 1 T im0 e ( d a1y s ) 5 6 7 22 33 44 55 66 77 Ivermectin concentration (ng/ml) 50 = LC25 Iv e r m e c tin C o n c . ( n g /m l) Ivermectin concentration (ng/ml) = LC50 Iv e rm e c tin C o n c . (n g /m l) Ivermectin concentration (ng/ml) Lethal concentration of ivermectin that kills GMS Anopheles D ose=200 D ose=400 D ose=800 Time T im e(days) (d a y s ) • Ivermectin PK data from 23 adult Thai (12 F: 11M) (Na-Bangchang et al. 2006) raw data kindly provided by Dr. Kesara Na-Bangchang • Data re-fitted using nonlinear mixed-effects modelling (NONMEM) • Standard dosing of 200 ug/kg was assumed (no individual dose data) • Simulations (n=500) were performed for a standard person weighing 56 kg pharmacokinetic models kindly created by Dr. Joel Tarning and Thanaporn Wattanakul Time (hours) dirus Ivermectin concentration (ng/ml) • Escalating concentratins of ivermectin reduce number of P. vivax oocysts per An. dirus • Ongoing work indicates that ivermectin also reduces proportion of vectors that develop P. vivax oocysts campestris minimus gambiae • The 400 μg/kg concentration appears to be ideal as it reaches the LC50 of An. dirus • Ivermectin (400 μg/kg ) is extremely safe and well tolerated Future directions • Clinical trials to investigate combination of ivermectin and dihydroartemisinin plus piperaquine will commence soon • Modelling efforts will be used to determine frequency of ivermectin MDAs to maximize impact on transmission • Perform repeated ivermectin MDAs with or without ACTs in Africa and the GMS and monitor impacts on entomological (eg. vector density, population age structure, and sporozoite rate) and parasitological (eg. symptomatic and asymptomatic Plasmodium prevalence, and molecular Force of Infection) indices of transmission P=0.0129 P=0.0007 P=0.0010 P=0.0003 P=0.0032 P=0.0002 P<0.0001 sawadwongporni Funding Sources The Military Infectious Disease Research Program, US Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center: Global Emerging Infections Surveillance Network, Colorado State University CRC 1686174 , the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation OPP1095931 and Grand Challenges Explorations grant 51995, and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases grants R21-A1079528 and R01A1094349-01A1. This research was performed while the author held a National Research Council Research Associateship Award at the Walter Reed Institute of Research – Armed Forces Research Institute of Medical Sciences. Disclaimer Material has been reviewed by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research – Armed Forces Research Institute of Medical Sciences. There is no objection to its publication. The opinions or assertions contained herein are the private views of the authors, and are not to be construed as official, or as reflecting true views of the Department of the Army or the Department of Defense.