2022-01-10T12:15:49Z
2022-01-10T12:15:49Z
2021-12-17
2022-01-10T07:46:01Z
Malaria eradication has for decades been on the global health agenda, but the causative agents of the disease, several species of the protist parasite Plasmodium, have evolved mechanisms to evade vaccine-induced immunity and to rapidly acquire resistance against all drugs entering clinical use. Because classical antimalarial approaches have consistently failed, new strategies must be explored. One of these is nanomedicine, the application of manipulation and fabrication technology in the range of molecular dimensions between 1 and 100 nm, to the development of new medical solutions. Here we review the current state of the art in malaria diagnosis, prevention, and therapy and how nanotechnology is already having an incipient impact in improving them. In the second half of this review, the next generation of antimalarial drugs currently in the clinical pipeline is presented, with a definition of these drugs’ target product profiles and an assessment of the potential role of nanotechnology in their development. Opinions extracted from interviews with experts in the fields of nanomedicine, clinical malaria, and the economic landscape of the disease are included to offer a wider scope of the current requirements to win the fight against malaria and of how nanoscience can contribute to achieve them. © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Article
Published version
English
Malària; Medicaments antipalúdics; Nanomedicina; Vacuna de la malària; Malaria; Antimalarials; Nanomedicine; Malaria vaccine
MDPI AG
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13122189
Pharmaceutics, 2021, vol.13, num. 2189
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13122189
cc by (c) Guasch Girbau, Arnau et al., 2021
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/