A decrease in the clinical efficacy of a 3-day artesunate-mefloquine combination treatment was reported in the areas of multidrug-resistant Plasmodium falciparum along the Thailand-Myanmar border. The current study investigated the possible contribution of genetic polymorphisms of the three major genes encoding drug efflux transporters, ABCB1, ABCG2, and ABCC1, to responses to the aforementioned treatment in 91 patients with acute uncomplicated falciparum malaria residing along the Thailand-Myanmar border. Patients carrying homozygous mutant genotype ABCB1 c.1236C>T (TT) were found to have a three-times higher chance of successful treatment with this combination compared with other genotypes (CC and CT). Furthermore, whole blood mefloquine concentrations in these patients with the TT genotype were significantly lower than those of patients carrying the CC genotype. Patients with heterozygous mutant genotype (CT), however, were three-times more likely to experience treatment failure. No significant association was found with the ABCG2 and ABCC1 gene polymorphisms. The results suggest that ABCB1 c.1236C>T polymorphisms could be useful genetic markers for predicting responses to the 3-day artesunate-mefloquine treatment; however, studies using larger sample sizes in different malaria-endemic areas are necessary to confirm this finding. This study highlights the impact of pharmacogenetic factors on antimalarial treatment responses and the basis for the application of control policies in various malaria-endemic areas.