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Treatment of urinary schistosomiasis: methodological issues and research needs identified through a Cochrane systematic review.

Abstract
Guidelines recommend praziquantel (PZQ) for the treatment and control of schistosomiasis, with no real alternative. Metrifonate was still widely used against Schistosoma haematobium in the 1990s, and then withdrawn. Experimental studies and clinical trials suggest that artemisinin compounds are active against S. haematobium. In a Cochrane systematic review assessing the efficacy and safety of drugs for treating urinary schistosomiasis, 24 randomized controlled trials (n=6315 individuals) met our inclusion criteria. These trials compared a variety of single agent and combination regimens with PZQ, metrifonate or artemisinin derivatives. The review confirmed that both the standard recommended doses of PZQ (single 40 mg/kg oral dose) and metrifonate (3x7.5-10 mg/kg oral doses administered fortnightly) are efficacious and safe in treating urinary schistosomiasis, but there is no study comparing these two regimens head-to-head. There is currently not enough evidence to evaluate artemisinin compounds. Most of the studies included in the Cochrane systematic review were insufficiently powered, lacked standardization in assessing and reporting outcomes, and had a number of methodological limitations. In this paper we discuss the implications of these findings with respect to public health and research methodology and propose priority research needs.
AuthorsA Danso-Appiah, P Garner, P L Olliaro, J Utzinger
JournalParasitology (Parasitology) Vol. 136 Issue 13 Pg. 1837-49 (Nov 2009) ISSN: 1469-8161 [Electronic] England
PMID19493363 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Review, Systematic Review)
Chemical References
  • Schistosomicides
Topics
  • Humans
  • Public Health
  • Public Policy
  • Schistosomiasis haematobia (drug therapy)
  • Schistosomicides (administration & dosage, therapeutic use)

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