Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ARALEN HYDROCHLORIDE versus MALARONE.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ARALEN HYDROCHLORIDE versus MALARONE.
ARALEN HYDROCHLORIDE vs MALARONE
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Chloroquine, a 4-aminoquinoline, accumulates in acidic organelles such as lysosomes and food vacuoles of malaria parasites, raising pH and inhibiting hemozoin polymerization, which leads to toxic heme accumulation and parasite death. It also has anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory effects by inhibiting TLR signaling and cytokine production.
Atovaquone is a selective inhibitor of the mitochondrial electron transport chain at the cytochrome bc1 complex (Complex III), disrupting pyrimidine synthesis and ATP generation in Plasmodium species. Proguanil, via its metabolite cycloguanil, inhibits dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), blocking DNA synthesis. Synergistic activity against erythrocytic and exoerythrocytic stages.
Chloroquine phosphate 500 mg (300 mg base) orally once weekly for prophylaxis; 600 mg base (1 g phosphate) orally initially, followed by 300 mg base (500 mg phosphate) at 6, 24, and 48 hours for treatment of malaria.
For malaria treatment: 4 tablets (each containing atovaquone 250 mg/proguanil 100 mg) orally once daily for 3 consecutive days. For malaria prophylaxis: 1 tablet (atovaquone 250 mg/proguanil 100 mg) orally once daily starting 1-2 days before travel, continued during travel and for 7 days after leaving endemic area.
None Documented
None Documented
48-72 hours (terminal elimination half-life); prolonged to weeks with chronic dosing due to extensive tissue accumulation, especially in the liver, spleen, and melanin-containing tissues.
Atovaquone: 50-70 hours (mean ~60 h); proguanil: 12-21 hours (mean ~16 h); cycloguanil: 10-16 hours. Long half-life of atovaquone allows single-dose treatment, but may delay parasite clearance.
Renal (~70% unchanged), with 10-20% in feces; biliary elimination is minor.
Atovaquone: 94% excreted unchanged in feces via biliary elimination, 6% in urine. Proguanil: 40-60% excreted unchanged in urine; cycloguanil (active metabolite) and proguanil metabolites also cleared renally.
Category C
Category C
Antimalarial
Antimalarial