Abstract. Recent evidence suggest that resistance to praziquantel (PZQ) may be developing. This would not be surprising in countries like Egypt where the drug has been used aggressively for more that 10 years. The classic phenotype of drug resistance is a significant increase in the 50% effective dose value of isolates retrieved from patients not responding to the drug. In a previous publication, we reported that such phenotypes have been isolated from humans infected with Schistosoma mansoni. Since the action of PZQ may be dependent upon the drug and host factors, most notably the immune system, we analyzed the quantitative effects of PZQ on single worms that differed in their response to PZQ when maintained in mice. Our hypothesis was that the in vitro action of the drug would correlate with it in vivo action. We confirmed this hypothesis and conclude that the in vitro action of the drug is related to its in vivo action. Knowing this relationship will assist in our ability to detect or survey for the PZQ resistant phenotype in human populations.Praziquantel (PZQ) is used for the treatment of infections caused by Schistosoma spp. 1 In a number of regions, including much of Egypt, PZQ has been copiously used, and the impact of the drug on schistosome infections has been significant. 2,3 In the laboratory, exposure of schistosomes to subcurative doses of PZQ over generations resulted in drugresistant schistosomes, 4 demonstrating the possibility of resistance arising in the field. Indeed, reports of resistance in the field have recently appeared. 5 However, the reality of these reports is difficult to establish because it is often difficult to distinguish between host factors and parasite factors when patients are not cured of schistosomiasis with normally effective doses. First, since the host immune system plays an active role in the process of killing PZQ-damaged worms, 6 normal parasites might survive treatment in immunocompromised hosts. In vivo studies can also be confounded by the fact that PZQ is less effective in killing immature parasites, 7 such that a wide range of host factors inhibiting development of the parasites can cause an apparent decrease in drug efficacy. Variability of host PZQ metabolism can also cause variability of efficacy. 8 In an effort to minimize the variability of these host factors, parasites isolated from patients not cured by antischistosomal drugs have been used to establish experimental infections in less-variable laboratory animal hosts. 9 If infections produced by these isolates are not cured by normal doses of PZQ, it suggests that the decreased responsiveness of the isolates is due to worm factors rather than host factors. However, this type of assessment is a rather toilsome process.Despite the dependence of PZQ on the host immune system for killing the parasites in vivo, PZQ has dramatic, measurable effects on schistosomes in vitro. The three hallmark effects are contraction of the worm musculature, 10 an influx of calcium into the worm, 11 and disruption of the tegument...
S U M M A R YTreatment with praziquantel (PZQ) has become virtually the sole basis of schistosomiasis control in sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere, and the drug is reviewed here in the context of the increasing rate that it is being used for this purpose. Attention is drawn to our relative lack of knowledge about the mechanisms of action of PZQ at the molecular level, the need for more work to be done on schistosome isolates that have been collected recently from endemic areas rather than those maintained in laboratory conditions for long periods, and our reliance for experimental work mainly on Schistosoma mansoni, little work having been done on S. haematobium. There is no evidence that resistance to PZQ has been induced in African schistosomes as a result of its large-scale use on that continent to date, but there is also no assurance that PZQ and/ or schistosomes are in any way unique and that resistant organisms will not be selected as a result of widespread drug usage. The failure of PZQ to produce complete cures in populations given a routine treatment should therefore solicit considerable concern. With few alternatives to PZQ currently available and/or on the horizon, methods to monitor drug-susceptibility in African schistosomes need to be devised and used to help ensure that this drug remains effective for as long a time as possible.
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