Abstract

Compounds that inhibit the P-glycoprotein-related efflux mechanism of multidrug-resistant cells reverse chloroquine resistance in vitro. Hence, the co-administration of chloroquine and an efflux-blocking drug could potentially treat chloroquine-resistant malaria infections. We administered a drug combination (chloroquine and a tiapamil analogue), that has been shown to reverse chloroquine resistance in vitro, to Aotus monkeys but failed to safely clear experimentally-induced chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum parasitaemias.

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