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      Gold complexes as potential anti-parasitic agents

      Coordination Chemistry Reviews
      Elsevier BV

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          The global status of schistosomiasis and its control.

          Schistosomiasis is being successfully controlled in many countries but remains a major public health problem, with an estimated 200 million people infected, mostly in Africa. Few countries in this region have undertaken successful and sustainable control programmes. The construction of water schemes to meet the power and agricultural requirements for development have lead to increasing transmission, especially of Schistosoma mansoni. Increasing population and movement have contributed to increased transmission and introduction of schistosomiasis to new areas. Most endemic countries are among the least developed whose health systems face difficulties to provide basic care at the primary health level. Constraints to control include, the lack of political commitment and infrastructure for public health interventions. Another constraint is that available anti-schistosomal drugs are expensive and the cost of individual treatment is a high proportion of the per capita drug budgets. There is need for increased support for schistosomiasis control in the most severely affected countries.
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            New trends for metal complexes with anticancer activity.

            Medicinal inorganic chemistry can exploit the unique properties of metal ions for the design of new drugs. This has, for instance, led to the clinical application of chemotherapeutic agents for cancer treatment, such as cisplatin. The use of cisplatin is, however, severely limited by its toxic side-effects. This has spurred chemists to employ different strategies in the development of new metal-based anticancer agents with different mechanisms of action. Recent trends in the field are discussed in this review. These include the more selective delivery and/or activation of cisplatin-related prodrugs and the discovery of new non-covalent interactions with the classical target, DNA. The use of the metal as scaffold rather than reactive centre and the departure from the cisplatin paradigm of activity towards a more targeted, cancer cell-specific approach, a major trend, are discussed as well. All this, together with the observation that some of the new drugs are organometallic complexes, illustrates that exciting times lie ahead for those interested in 'metals in medicine'.
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              Gold-based therapeutic agents.

              C. E. Shaw (1999)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Coordination Chemistry Reviews
                Coordination Chemistry Reviews
                Elsevier BV
                00108545
                June 2009
                June 2009
                : 253
                : 11-12
                : 1619-1626
                Article
                10.1016/j.ccr.2008.12.003
                a6561b85-7110-4850-8d89-185006790ae2
                © 2009

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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