Will a Global Subsidy of Artemisinin-Based Combination Treatment (Act) for Malaria Delay the Emergence of Resistance and Save Lives?

28 Pages Posted: 10 Aug 2005

See all articles by Ramanan Laxminarayan

Ramanan Laxminarayan

One Health Trust; Princeton University

Mead Over

World Bank - Development Research Group (DECRG); Center for Global Development

David L. Smith

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Date Written: August 2005

Abstract

Artemisinin-based combination treatments (ACTs) are seen as an important tool in the global effort to roll back malaria. With rapidly increasing parasite resistance to chloroquine in many parts of the world, there is greater international recognition of the need for both a different antimalarial and a coordinated malaria treatment strategy to ensure that resistance does not needlessly cut short the useful therapeutic life of any successor drug to chloroquine. The effectiveness of antimalarial drugs is a global public good, of particular value in malarious regions that also are among the most economically impoverished parts of the world. Inappropriate drug use in neighboring countries reduces the incentive of any given country to deploy drug regimens that may be rapidly undermined by resistance originating outside their borders. Therefore, a case can be made for globally coordinated action to protect the effectiveness of these valuable drugs. Translating this case to one for a global subsidy is not straightforward. On the one hand, in the absence of such a subsidy to ensure that ACTs are comparably priced to monotherapies, increasing monotherapy of artemisinin and other antimalarials that would be used along with artemisinin in ACT will hasten the demise of this drug. On the other hand, a global subsidy would greatly increase the use and potential misuse of ACTs and could result in resistance emerging at a more rapid rate. This study finds that a subsidy to ACTs is likely to slow the rate of emergence of resistance to artemisinin and partner drugs, even if such a subsidy were to increase the use of ACTs significantly. This conclusion is robust to alternative assumptions regarding the responsiveness of demand to the lower price for ACTs and a wide range of epidemiological and economic parameters. However, the simulation results show that a subsidy for two or more ACT combinations is likely to be much more cost-effective than a subsidy to a single ACT. The only consideration is that the drugs used as partners to artemisinin be unrelated to each other and to artemisinin in mechanism of action and in genetic bases of resistance, so that a single mutation cannot encode resistance to both components. Such a subsidy program for ACTs, administered globally, that reduces reliance on any single combination, and discourages monotherapy, not only of artemisinin but of any effective antimalarial that could potentially be used as partner drug with artemisinin, is likely to be effective (and cost-effective) both in buying time for ACTs and in saving lives.

Suggested Citation

Laxminarayan, Ramanan and Over, Mead and Smith, David L., Will a Global Subsidy of Artemisinin-Based Combination Treatment (Act) for Malaria Delay the Emergence of Resistance and Save Lives? (August 2005). World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 3670, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=770980 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.770980

Ramanan Laxminarayan (Contact Author)

One Health Trust ( email )

1616 P St NW
Suite 600
Washington DC, DC 20036
United States

Princeton University ( email )

22 Chambers Street
Princeton, NJ 08544-0708
United States

Mead Over

World Bank - Development Research Group (DECRG) ( email )

1818 H. Street, N.W.
MSN3-311
Washington, DC 20433
United States

HOME PAGE: http://econ.worldbank.org/staff/mover

Center for Global Development

2055 L St. NW
5th floor
Washington, DC 20036
United States

David L. Smith

National Institutes of Health (NIH) ( email )

9000 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, MD 20892
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
86
Abstract Views
1,184
Rank
531,964
PlumX Metrics