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Dried Blood Spots in Bioanalysis of Antimalarials: Relevance and Challenges in Quantitative Assessment of Antimalarial Drugs

IR@CDRI: CSIR-Central Drug Research Institute, Lucknow

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Field Value
 
Creator Taneja, Isha
Erukala, Madhuri
Raju, K S R
Singh, S P
Wahajuddin
 
Date 2014-06-26T10:19:06Z
2014-06-26T10:19:06Z
2013
 
Identifier Bioanalysis, 2013, 5(17), 2171-86
http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1301
 
Description Malaria is the leading parasitic disease in the emerging countries. Therapeutic drug monitoring of antimalarial drugs is becoming increasingly important due to their spreading resistance. Measuring systemic antimalarial drug concentrations is also vital for safety and pharmacokinetic evaluations during clinical development. Dried blood spot (DBS) technique is a convenient alternative sample collection method to venipuncture, especially in resource limited areas where the clinical studies of antimalarials are usually carried out. Various bioanalytical methods for antimalarial drug estimation utilising DBS sampling have been reported till date. This review discusses the applicability and relevance of DBS in quantitative assessment of antimalarial drugs, the advantages and drawbacks of DBS and the difficulties encountered during its implementation.
 
Format 236005 bytes
application/pdf
 
Language en
 
Relation CSIR-CDRI Communication No. 8508.
 
Subject Dried blood spot
Therapeutic drug monitoring
Bioanalysis
Drug resistance
Toxicokinetics
Hematocrit
 
Title Dried Blood Spots in Bioanalysis of Antimalarials: Relevance and Challenges in Quantitative Assessment of Antimalarial Drugs
 
Type Article