Dr Thomas J Peto
Podcast interview
Malaria elimination and mass drug administration

Although malaria has greatly declined in Southeast Asia this century, treating clinical cases won’t be sufficient to eliminate it from the region. Mass drug administration allows to eliminate parasites from asymptomatic carriers, and careful engagement with whole communities is key.
Thomas Peto
MPH, PhD
Research Epidemiologist
Malaria
I am an epidemiologist working at the Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit, in the Malaria Group led by Professor Arjen Dondorp. I work in rural areas to study malaria epidemiology and conduct clinical trials to evaluate malaria treatment and elimination strategies in Southeast Asia. The studies I work on cover mass drug administration, new artemisinin combination therapies, screening and treatment approaches, and novel diagnostics to address the hidden reservoir of asymptomatic malaria infections. I am also interested in the prevention and control of chronic viral hepatitis. I am the study coordinator for the Triple Artemisinin Combination Therapy Cambodia-Vietnam (TACT-CV) clinical trial.
Recent publications
Acrobatics for Antibiotics: Exploring circus-based engagement on community practices surrounding antimicrobial resistance in Cambodia
Journal article
Wijntuin R. et al, (2026), Wellcome Open Research, 11, 104 - 104
Estimating enteric fever seroincidence in rural western Cambodia: findings from a population-based cross-sectional serosurvey.
Journal article
Zhang M. et al, (2026), medRxiv
Population pharmacokinetics of artemether-lumefantrine plus amodiaquine in patients with uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria.
Journal article
Ding J. et al, (2026), Br J Clin Pharmacol, 92, 589 - 605
Circus arts shine a spotlight on antimicrobial resistance in Cambodia.
Journal article
Moul V. et al, (2026), Int Health
Advances in population-based interventions to control falciparum malaria.
Journal article
Glossop SE. et al, (2025), Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg, 119, 1316 - 1323
