African Governments, WHO and Donors Urged to Switch to Artesunate in the Fight Against Malaria
 By Shadrack Kavilu
    KAMPALA---A drug proven to reduce deaths in children suffering from severe malaria  must be immediately rolled out in African countries, says the international  medical humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).
   In its new report Making the Switch, MSF  calls on African governments to follow new World Health Organization (WHO)  guidelines soon to be released, and switch from the far less effective quinine  to artesunate, which could avert nearly 200,000 deaths each year. 
  MSF  also calls on WHO and donors to support governments so that the urgent  treatment change can happen quickly.
   Malaria is the number one killer of children in  Africa;  it kills nearly one million  people each year, the vast majority of whom are African children under five  years of age. 
  Each  year, around eight million simple malaria cases progress to severe  malaria;  people with severe malaria show  clinical signs of organ damage, which may involve the brain, lungs, kidneys or  blood vessels; all malaria deaths are the result of severe malaria.  
  “When children arrive at the clinic  with severe malaria, they often are having convulsions, vomiting or at risk of  going into shock, and you just want to be able to give them effective treatment  quickly,” said Veronique De Clerck, Medical Coordinator for MSF in Uganda.
   She noted that for decades quinine has been  used in severe malaria, but it can be both difficult to use and  dangerous.  “With artesunate, we now have a drug that saves more lives  from severe malaria, and is safer, easier and more effective than quinine.” she  observed.   
  Unlike artesunate, she said Quinine  has to be given three times a day in a slow intravenous drip that takes four  hours, a treatment that is burdensome for both patients and health staff.  Artesunate, in contrast, can be given in just four minutes, by giving a patient  an intravenous or intramuscular injection.   
  A landmark clinical trial in late 2010  concluded that the use of artesunate to treat children with severe malaria  reduces the risk of death by nearly a quarter.  The study, carried out in  nine African countries, found that for every 41 children given artesunate over  quinine, one extra life was saved. 
   Because of the complexities of  administering quinine, children in the trial who were assigned to receive  quinine were almost four times more likely to die before even receiving  treatment.   
  MSF participated in the trial  through its research affiliate Epicentre, with a research site in Uganda. MSF  has since changed its own treatment protocols and now plans to work with  national health authorities to roll out artesunate in its projects over the  coming months.  
  The evidence is overwhelming, but MSF’s  report stresses that change will not happen on its own.
  The WHO has said it will soon issue  new guidelines recommending artesunate for treating severe malaria in children  in Africa, it needs to also develop a plan to help countries make this switch.
   The report says African governments must  urgently change their treatment protocols and donors must send a clear signal  to countries that they will support the additional cost where needed. 
   Artesunate is three times more expensive, but  the difference in cost of US$31 million each year for a global switch is very  little for the nearly 200,000 lives that researchers say could be saved.  
  “We’ve been here before when WHO  changed its treatment recommendations for simple malaria in 2001. It took years  for countries to actually make the switch, and shockingly, in some countries  the far inferior drugs are still being used ten years on,” said Dr. Martin De  Smet, who coordinates MSF’s malaria work. 



