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  5. Population pharmacokinetic modelling of primaquine exposures in lactating women and breastfed infants

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Article
English
2024

Population pharmacokinetic modelling of primaquine exposures in lactating women and breastfed infants

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0 Files

English
2024
Nature Communications
Vol 15 (1)
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47908-y

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Sir Nicholas White
Sir Nicholas White

University Of Cambridge

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Thanaporn Wattanakul
Mary Ellen Gilder
Rose McGready
+6 more

Abstract

Current guidelines advise against primaquine treatment for breastfeeding mothers to avoid the potential for haemolysis in infants with G6PD deficiency. To predict the haemolytic risk, the amount of drug received from the breast milk and the resulting infant drug exposure need to be characterised. Here, we develop a pharmacokinetic model to describe the drug concentrations in breastfeeding women using venous, capillary, and breast milk data. A mother-to-infant model is developed to mimic the infant feeding pattern and used to predict their drug exposures. Primaquine and carboxyprimaquine exposures in infants are <1% of the exposure in mothers. Therefore, even in infants with the most severe G6PD deficiency variants, it is highly unlikely that standard doses of primaquine (0.25-1 mg base/kg once daily given to the mother for 1-14 days) would cause significant haemolysis. After the neonatal period, primaquine should not be restricted for breastfeeding women (Clinical Trials Registration: NCT01780753).

How to cite this publication

Thanaporn Wattanakul, Mary Ellen Gilder, Rose McGready, Warunee Hanpithakpong, Nicholas P. J. Day, Sir Nicholas White, François Nosten, Joel Tärning, Richard M. Hoglund (2024). Population pharmacokinetic modelling of primaquine exposures in lactating women and breastfed infants. Nature Communications, 15(1), DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47908-y.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2024

Authors

9

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Nature Communications

DOI

10.1038/s41467-024-47908-y

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