A “reverse pharmacology” approach for developing an anti-malarial phytomedicine
A “reverse pharmacology” approach for developing an anti-malarial phytomedicine
A “reverse pharmacology” approach to developing an anti-malarial phytomedicine was designed and implemented in Mali, resulting in a new standardized herbal anti-malarial after six years of research. The first step was to select a remedy for development, through a retrospective treatment-outcome study. The second step was a dose-escalating clinical trial that showed a dose-response phenomenon and helped select the safest and most efficacious dose. The third step was a randomized controlled trial to compare the phytomedicine to the standard first-line treatment. The last step was to identify active compounds which can be used as markers for standardization and quality control. This example of “reverse pharmacology” shows that a standardized phytomedicine can be developed faster and more cheaply than conventional drugs. Even if both approaches are not fully comparable, their efficiency in terms of public health and their complementarity should be thoroughly considered.
S8
Willcox, Merlin L.
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Graz, Bertrand
33383bb4-8763-40bc-8e09-a045934a536e
Falquet, Jacques
9a176245-1ffc-4b6d-8f44-357a23f6ec42
Diakite, Chiaka
cf299e12-48cd-4591-bcc3-21a54e84e740
Giani, Sergio
6799c9d9-04b2-46fd-8593-b89f56844b0b
Diallo, Drissa
39a791e4-1b09-4733-b9c1-693fc53188eb
15 March 2011
Willcox, Merlin L.
18b6a754-da99-4f3b-aba1-6283941fbabb
Graz, Bertrand
33383bb4-8763-40bc-8e09-a045934a536e
Falquet, Jacques
9a176245-1ffc-4b6d-8f44-357a23f6ec42
Diakite, Chiaka
cf299e12-48cd-4591-bcc3-21a54e84e740
Giani, Sergio
6799c9d9-04b2-46fd-8593-b89f56844b0b
Diallo, Drissa
39a791e4-1b09-4733-b9c1-693fc53188eb
Willcox, Merlin L., Graz, Bertrand, Falquet, Jacques, Diakite, Chiaka, Giani, Sergio and Diallo, Drissa
(2011)
A “reverse pharmacology” approach for developing an anti-malarial phytomedicine.
Malaria Journal, 10, supplement 1, .
(doi:10.1186/1475-2875-10-S1-S8).
Abstract
A “reverse pharmacology” approach to developing an anti-malarial phytomedicine was designed and implemented in Mali, resulting in a new standardized herbal anti-malarial after six years of research. The first step was to select a remedy for development, through a retrospective treatment-outcome study. The second step was a dose-escalating clinical trial that showed a dose-response phenomenon and helped select the safest and most efficacious dose. The third step was a randomized controlled trial to compare the phytomedicine to the standard first-line treatment. The last step was to identify active compounds which can be used as markers for standardization and quality control. This example of “reverse pharmacology” shows that a standardized phytomedicine can be developed faster and more cheaply than conventional drugs. Even if both approaches are not fully comparable, their efficiency in terms of public health and their complementarity should be thoroughly considered.
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Published date: 15 March 2011
Organisations:
Primary Care & Population Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 403754
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/403754
ISSN: 1475-2875
PURE UUID: baf4e900-59de-4e68-97cd-1767934e2397
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Date deposited: 09 Dec 2016 14:43
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:50
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Author:
Merlin L. Willcox
Author:
Bertrand Graz
Author:
Jacques Falquet
Author:
Chiaka Diakite
Author:
Sergio Giani
Author:
Drissa Diallo
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