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Controlled Human Malaria Infection Model for Evaluation of Transmission-blocking Interventions - Study 2 (CHMI-trans2)

Primary Purpose

Malaria,Falciparum, Gametocytes, Controlled Human Malaria Infection

Status
Completed
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
Netherlands
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Piperaquine (low dose)
Piperaquine (high dose)
Sulfadoxine pyrimethamine
Atovaquone Proguanil
malaria challenge infection, P. falciparum 3D7
Blood stage malaria challenge infection, P. falciparum 3D7
Sponsored by
Radboud University Medical Center
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional other trial for Malaria,Falciparum

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - 35 Years (Adult)All SexesAccepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

In order to be eligible to participate in this study, a subject must meet all of the following criteria:

  1. Subject is aged ≥ 18 and ≤ 35 years and in good health.
  2. Subject has adequate understanding of the procedures of the study and is able and willing (in the investigator's opinion) to comply with all study requirements.
  3. Subject is willing to complete an informed consent questionnaire and is able to answer all questions correctly.
  4. Subject is able to communicate well with the investigator and is available to attend all study visits, lives in proximity to the trial centre (<10 km) or (if >10km) is willing to stay in a hotel close to the trial centre during part of the study (from day 4 (blood stage challenge) 5 (sporozoite challenge) post-infection until T1+4 provided that the subject has had 2 consecutive negative 18S qPCR tests (at least 24 hours apart) following T1 treatment; or until day T3+3).
  5. The subject will remain within the Netherlands during the challenge period, will not travel to a malaria-endemic area during the study period, and is reachable (24/7) by mobile telephone throughout the entire study period.
  6. Subject agrees to their general practitioner being informed and contacted about their participation in the study and agrees to sign a form to request the release by their General Practitioner (GP), and medical specialist when necessary, to the investigator(s), of any relevant medical information concerning possible contra-indications for participation in the study.
  7. The subject agrees to refrain from blood donation to Sanquin or for other purposes throughout the study period and for a defined period thereafter according to current Sanquin guidelines.
  8. For female subjects: subject agrees to use continuous adequate contraception** and not to breastfeed for the duration of study.
  9. Subject agrees to refrain from intensive physical exercise (disproportionate to the subject's usual daily activity or exercise routine) during the malaria challenge period until day 38 after infection.
  10. Subject agrees to avoid additional triggers that may cause elevations in liver enzymes including alcohol from baseline up to 1 week post treatment (T3).
  11. Subject has signed written informed consent to participate in the trial. (*Acceptable forms of contraception include: established use of oral, injected or implanted hormonal contraceptives; intrauterine device or intrauterine system; barrier methods (condoms or diaphragm with additional spermicide); male partner's sterilisation (with appropriate post-vasectomy documentation of absence of sperm in the ejaculate); true abstinence when this is in line with the preferred and usual lifestyle of the subject; Periodic abstinence (e.g., calendar, ovulation, symptothermal, post-ovulation methods) and withdrawal are not acceptable methods of contraception.)

Exclusion Criteria:

A potential subject who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation in this study:

  1. Any history, or evidence at screening, of clinically significant symptoms, physical signs or abnormal laboratory values suggestive of systemic conditions, such as cardiovascular, pulmonary, renal, hepatic, neurological, dermatological, endocrine, malignant, haematological, infectious, immunodeficient, psychiatric and other disorders, which could compromise the health of the volunteer during the study or interfere with the interpretation of the study results. These include, but are not limited to, any of the following.

    1.1. Body weight <50 kg or Body Mass Index (BMI) <18 or >30 kg/m2 at screening. 1.2. A heightened risk of cardiovascular disease, as determined by: an estimated ten year risk of fatal cardiovascular disease of ≥5% at screening, as determined by the Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation (SCORE); history, or evidence at screening, of clinically significant arrhythmia's, prolonged QT-interval or other clinically relevant ECG abnormalities; or a positive family history of cardiac events in 1st or 2nd degree relatives <50 years old.

    1.3. A medical history of functional asplenia, sickle cell trait/disease, thalassaemia trait/disease or G6PD-deficiency.

    1.4. History of epilepsy in the period of five years prior to study onset, even if no longer on medication.

    1.5. Screening tests positive for Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), active Hepatitis B Virus (HBV), Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) 1.6. Chronic use of i) immunosuppressive drugs, ii) antibiotics, iii) or other immune modifying drugs within three months prior to study onset (inhaled and topical corticosteroids and oral anti-histamines exempted) or expected use of such during the study period.

    1.7. Any recent or current systemic therapy with an antibiotic or drug with potential anti-malarial activity (chloroquine, doxycycline, tetracycline, piperaquine, benzodiazepine, flunarizine, fluoxetine, tetracycline, azithromycin, clindamycin, erythromycin, hydroxychloroquine, etc.) (allowable timeframe for use at the Investigator's discretion).

    1.8. History of malignancy of any organ system (other than localized basal cell carcinoma of the skin), treated or untreated, within the past 5 years.

    1.9. Any history of treatment for severe psychiatric disease by a psychiatrist in the past year.

    1.10. History of drug or alcohol abuse interfering with normal social function in the period of one year prior to study onset, positive urine toxicology test for cocaine or amphetamines at screening or at inclusion, or positive urine toxicology test for cannabis at inclusion.

  2. For female subjects: positive urine pregnancy test at screening and/or at the baseline visit.
  3. Abnormal ALT/AST values on baseline
  4. Any history of malaria, positive serology for P. falciparum, or previous participation in any malaria (vaccine) study.
  5. Known hypersensitivity to or contra-indications (including co-medication) for use of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, piperaquine, chloroquine, Malarone®, artemether-lumefantrine, primaquine or history of severe (allergic) reactions to mosquito bites.
  6. Participation in any other clinical study in the 30 days prior to the start of the study or during the study period.
  7. Being an employee or student of the department of Medical Microbiology of the Radboudumc or the department of Internal Medicine.
  8. Any other condition or situation that would, in the opinion of the investigator, place the subject at an unacceptable risk of injury or render the subject unable to meet the requirements of the protocol.
  9. For cohort B (blood stage challenge): Received a blood transfusion in the past.
  10. For cohort B (blood stage challenge): Women of childbearing potential with a screening test positive for erythrocyte anti-Rh(c) and/or anti-Rh(e) antibodies.

Sites / Locations

  • Radboud university medical center

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm 3

Arm 4

Arm Type

Experimental

Experimental

Experimental

Experimental

Arm Label

Group 1 (Cohort A) LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/PIP

Group 2 (Cohort A) LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/SP

Group 3 (Cohort B) LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/PIP

Group 4 (Cohort B) LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/SP

Arm Description

Cohort A will be subjected to a standard controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) delivered by five Pf-infected mosquitoes. All volunteers will be treated with a single oral subcurative low-dose of piperaquine (LD-PIP, 480 mg, T1). Volunteers will receive a second treatment (T2, LD-PIP2, 480mg) if a recrudescence of asexual parasitemia occurs before day 21 post challenge infection. Volunteers in group 1 (LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/PIP) will be curatively treated with piperaquine (960mg).

Cohort A will be subjected to a standard controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) delivered by five Pf-infected mosquitoes. All volunteers will be treated with a single oral subcurative low-dose of piperaquine (LD-PIP, 480 mg, T1). Volunteers will receive a second treatment (T2, LD-PIP2, 480mg) if a recrudescence of asexual parasitemia occurs before day 21 post challenge infection. Volunteers in group 2(LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/SP) will be curatively treated with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (1000mg/50mg).

Cohort B will be subjected to a standard blood stage challenge with ~2,800 Pf-infected erythrocytes by intravenous injection. All volunteers will be treated with a single oral subcurative low-dose of piperaquine (LD-PIP, 480 mg, T1). Volunteers will receive a second treatment (T2, LD-PIP2, 480mg) if a recrudescence of asexual parasitemia occurs before day 21 post challenge infection. Volunteers in group 3 (LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/PIP) will be curatively treated with piperaquine (960mg)

Cohort B will be subjected to a standard blood stage challenge with ~2,800 Pf-infected erythrocytes by intravenous injection. All volunteers will be treated with a single oral subcurative low-dose of piperaquine (LD-PIP, 480 mg, T1). Volunteers will receive a second treatment (T2, LD-PIP2, 480mg) if a recrudescence of asexual parasitemia occurs before day 21 post challenge infection. Volunteers in group 4 (LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/SP) will be curatively treated with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (1000mg/50mg).

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Frequency of Adverse Events in the CHMI-trans Model
Frequency of adverse events in the CHMI-trans model.
Gametocyte Prevalence
Number of individuals in each study arm that show prevalence of gametocytes as defined by quantitative reverse-transcriptase PCR (qRT-PCR) for CCp4 (female) and PfMGET (male) mRNA with a threshold of 5 gametocytes/mL for positivity.
Magnitude of Adverse Events in the CHMI-trans Model
symptoms will be ranked as (1) mild, (2) moderate, or (3) severe, depending on their intensity according to the following scale: Mild (grade 1): awareness of symptoms that are easily tolerated and do not interfere with usual daily activity Moderate (grade 2): discomfort that interferes with or limits usual daily activity Severe (grade 3): disabling, with subsequent inability to perform usual daily activity, resulting in absence or required bed rest

Secondary Outcome Measures

Peak Density Gametocytes
Peak density of gametocytes by qRT-PCR.
AUC Gametocytes
The area under the curve of gametocyte density versus time. The median AUC was calculated for both cohorts. Since onset of gametocytaemia differs depending on method of infection a window of 15 days was used to calculate AUC, from the time-point where a minimum of 50% of participants within a cohort had detectable gametocytemia.
Gametocyte Commitment
The gametocyte commitment rate is estimated by dividing the peak gametocyte by the peak of asexual parasites.
Gametocyte Sex-ratio
Proportion of male gametocytes
Number of Participants Infectious for Mosquitoes Through DFA
Prevalence of gametocyte infectiousness for Anopheles mosquitoes through Direct Feeding Assays (Direct Skin Feeding Assay, DFA).

Full Information

First Posted
February 27, 2018
Last Updated
June 15, 2020
Sponsor
Radboud University Medical Center
Collaborators
The PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative (MVI), QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03454048
Brief Title
Controlled Human Malaria Infection Model for Evaluation of Transmission-blocking Interventions - Study 2
Acronym
CHMI-trans2
Official Title
Controlled Human Malaria Infection Study to Assess Gametocytemia and Mosquito Transmissibility in Participants Challenged With Plasmodium Falciparum by Sporozoite or Blood Stage Challenge to Establish a Model for the Evaluation of Transmission-blocking Interventions
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
March 2020
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
May 7, 2018 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
November 1, 2018 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
November 20, 2018 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Principal Investigator
Name of the Sponsor
Radboud University Medical Center
Collaborators
The PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative (MVI), QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
Yes

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
This is a single-center, open label study. The primary aim of this project is to develop a controlled human malaria infection transmission model ("CHMI-trans") or "challenge model" to evaluate the capacity of vaccines, biologics (monoclonal antibodies, or mAbs), and drugs to block malaria parasite transmission by assessing infectiousness of Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) gametocyte carriers for Anopheles mosquitoes.
Detailed Description
A total of 24 volunteers, in two cohorts (n=12), will be randomly assigned to two groups per cohort (n=6). Cohort A will be subjected to a standard controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) delivered by five Pf-infected mosquitoes (groups 1 and 2). Cohort B will be subjected to a standard blood stage challenge with ~2,800 Pf-infected erythrocytes by intravenous injection (groups 3 and 4). Treatment is subsequently initiated to induce gametocytemia (treatment 1, T1) and to clear pathogenic asexual parasites whilst leaving gametocytes unaffected (treatment 2 and 3, T2 and T3). At the end of the study, treatment of all parasite stages is provided following national treatment guidelines (end treatment, ET). Once malaria infections are detected by 18S qPCR positive (sporozoite challenge) or on day 8 (blood stage challenge), all volunteers will be treated with a single oral subcurative low-dose of piperaquine (LD-PIP, 480 mg, T1). Using blood samples taken twice daily, the initial clearance of parasitemia will be carefully monitored. After T1, volunteers will receive a second treatment (T2, LD-PIP2, 480mg) if a recrudescence of asexual parasitemia occurs before day 21 post challenge infection. On day 21 or when a recrudescence occurs after T2, volunteers in group 1 and 3 (LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/PIP) will be curatively treated with piperaquine (960mg) and group 2 and 4 (LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/SP) with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (1000mg/50mg). These treatment regimens cure asexual parasitemia while leaving immature and mature gametocytes unaffected. To ensure the radical clearance of all parasite stages, all volunteers will receive a final treatment (ET) according to national guidelines with atovaquone/proguanil (Malarone®) on day 36. Daily blood samples will allow detailed quantification of gametocytes, gametocyte sex ratio and ex vivo assessments of gametocyte fitness. Additionally, blood samples will be obtained for Direct Membrane Feeding Assay (DMFA) and volunteers will be subjected to Direct Skin Feeding Assays (DFA). These assays will provide evidence on the infectivity of volunteers.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Malaria,Falciparum, Gametocytes, Controlled Human Malaria Infection, Transmission

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Other
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Parallel Assignment
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
24 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Group 1 (Cohort A) LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/PIP
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Cohort A will be subjected to a standard controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) delivered by five Pf-infected mosquitoes. All volunteers will be treated with a single oral subcurative low-dose of piperaquine (LD-PIP, 480 mg, T1). Volunteers will receive a second treatment (T2, LD-PIP2, 480mg) if a recrudescence of asexual parasitemia occurs before day 21 post challenge infection. Volunteers in group 1 (LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/PIP) will be curatively treated with piperaquine (960mg).
Arm Title
Group 2 (Cohort A) LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/SP
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Cohort A will be subjected to a standard controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) delivered by five Pf-infected mosquitoes. All volunteers will be treated with a single oral subcurative low-dose of piperaquine (LD-PIP, 480 mg, T1). Volunteers will receive a second treatment (T2, LD-PIP2, 480mg) if a recrudescence of asexual parasitemia occurs before day 21 post challenge infection. Volunteers in group 2(LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/SP) will be curatively treated with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (1000mg/50mg).
Arm Title
Group 3 (Cohort B) LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/PIP
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Cohort B will be subjected to a standard blood stage challenge with ~2,800 Pf-infected erythrocytes by intravenous injection. All volunteers will be treated with a single oral subcurative low-dose of piperaquine (LD-PIP, 480 mg, T1). Volunteers will receive a second treatment (T2, LD-PIP2, 480mg) if a recrudescence of asexual parasitemia occurs before day 21 post challenge infection. Volunteers in group 3 (LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/PIP) will be curatively treated with piperaquine (960mg)
Arm Title
Group 4 (Cohort B) LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/SP
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Cohort B will be subjected to a standard blood stage challenge with ~2,800 Pf-infected erythrocytes by intravenous injection. All volunteers will be treated with a single oral subcurative low-dose of piperaquine (LD-PIP, 480 mg, T1). Volunteers will receive a second treatment (T2, LD-PIP2, 480mg) if a recrudescence of asexual parasitemia occurs before day 21 post challenge infection. Volunteers in group 4 (LD-PIP/LD-PIP2/SP) will be curatively treated with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (1000mg/50mg).
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
Piperaquine (low dose)
Other Intervention Name(s)
piperaquine phosphate
Intervention Description
subcurative regimen (480 mg)
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
Piperaquine (high dose)
Other Intervention Name(s)
piperaquine phosphate
Intervention Description
Curative regimen (960mg)
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
Sulfadoxine pyrimethamine
Other Intervention Name(s)
Fansidar
Intervention Description
Curative regimen (1000mg/50mg)
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
Atovaquone Proguanil
Other Intervention Name(s)
Malarone
Intervention Description
Curative regimen (1000/400 mg, for 3 days)
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
malaria challenge infection, P. falciparum 3D7
Other Intervention Name(s)
3D7 Plasmodium falciparum
Intervention Description
malaria challenge infection by P. falciparum 3D7-infected mosquito bites
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
Blood stage malaria challenge infection, P. falciparum 3D7
Other Intervention Name(s)
P. falciparum 3D7-infected human erythrocytes
Intervention Description
P. falciparum 3D7-infected human erythrocytes administered intravenously for the purpose controlled human malaria infection.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Frequency of Adverse Events in the CHMI-trans Model
Description
Frequency of adverse events in the CHMI-trans model.
Time Frame
up to day 51 after challenge infection
Title
Gametocyte Prevalence
Description
Number of individuals in each study arm that show prevalence of gametocytes as defined by quantitative reverse-transcriptase PCR (qRT-PCR) for CCp4 (female) and PfMGET (male) mRNA with a threshold of 5 gametocytes/mL for positivity.
Time Frame
up to day 51 after challenge infection
Title
Magnitude of Adverse Events in the CHMI-trans Model
Description
symptoms will be ranked as (1) mild, (2) moderate, or (3) severe, depending on their intensity according to the following scale: Mild (grade 1): awareness of symptoms that are easily tolerated and do not interfere with usual daily activity Moderate (grade 2): discomfort that interferes with or limits usual daily activity Severe (grade 3): disabling, with subsequent inability to perform usual daily activity, resulting in absence or required bed rest
Time Frame
up to day 51 after challenge infection
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Peak Density Gametocytes
Description
Peak density of gametocytes by qRT-PCR.
Time Frame
up to day 51 after challenge infection
Title
AUC Gametocytes
Description
The area under the curve of gametocyte density versus time. The median AUC was calculated for both cohorts. Since onset of gametocytaemia differs depending on method of infection a window of 15 days was used to calculate AUC, from the time-point where a minimum of 50% of participants within a cohort had detectable gametocytemia.
Time Frame
up to day 51 after challenge infection
Title
Gametocyte Commitment
Description
The gametocyte commitment rate is estimated by dividing the peak gametocyte by the peak of asexual parasites.
Time Frame
up to day 51 after challenge infection
Title
Gametocyte Sex-ratio
Description
Proportion of male gametocytes
Time Frame
up to day 51 after challenge infection
Title
Number of Participants Infectious for Mosquitoes Through DFA
Description
Prevalence of gametocyte infectiousness for Anopheles mosquitoes through Direct Feeding Assays (Direct Skin Feeding Assay, DFA).
Time Frame
up to day 51 after challenge infection

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
18 Years
Maximum Age & Unit of Time
35 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: In order to be eligible to participate in this study, a subject must meet all of the following criteria: Subject is aged ≥ 18 and ≤ 35 years and in good health. Subject has adequate understanding of the procedures of the study and is able and willing (in the investigator's opinion) to comply with all study requirements. Subject is willing to complete an informed consent questionnaire and is able to answer all questions correctly. Subject is able to communicate well with the investigator and is available to attend all study visits, lives in proximity to the trial centre (<10 km) or (if >10km) is willing to stay in a hotel close to the trial centre during part of the study (from day 4 (blood stage challenge) 5 (sporozoite challenge) post-infection until T1+4 provided that the subject has had 2 consecutive negative 18S qPCR tests (at least 24 hours apart) following T1 treatment; or until day T3+3). The subject will remain within the Netherlands during the challenge period, will not travel to a malaria-endemic area during the study period, and is reachable (24/7) by mobile telephone throughout the entire study period. Subject agrees to their general practitioner being informed and contacted about their participation in the study and agrees to sign a form to request the release by their General Practitioner (GP), and medical specialist when necessary, to the investigator(s), of any relevant medical information concerning possible contra-indications for participation in the study. The subject agrees to refrain from blood donation to Sanquin or for other purposes throughout the study period and for a defined period thereafter according to current Sanquin guidelines. For female subjects: subject agrees to use continuous adequate contraception** and not to breastfeed for the duration of study. Subject agrees to refrain from intensive physical exercise (disproportionate to the subject's usual daily activity or exercise routine) during the malaria challenge period until day 38 after infection. Subject agrees to avoid additional triggers that may cause elevations in liver enzymes including alcohol from baseline up to 1 week post treatment (T3). Subject has signed written informed consent to participate in the trial. (*Acceptable forms of contraception include: established use of oral, injected or implanted hormonal contraceptives; intrauterine device or intrauterine system; barrier methods (condoms or diaphragm with additional spermicide); male partner's sterilisation (with appropriate post-vasectomy documentation of absence of sperm in the ejaculate); true abstinence when this is in line with the preferred and usual lifestyle of the subject; Periodic abstinence (e.g., calendar, ovulation, symptothermal, post-ovulation methods) and withdrawal are not acceptable methods of contraception.) Exclusion Criteria: A potential subject who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation in this study: Any history, or evidence at screening, of clinically significant symptoms, physical signs or abnormal laboratory values suggestive of systemic conditions, such as cardiovascular, pulmonary, renal, hepatic, neurological, dermatological, endocrine, malignant, haematological, infectious, immunodeficient, psychiatric and other disorders, which could compromise the health of the volunteer during the study or interfere with the interpretation of the study results. These include, but are not limited to, any of the following. 1.1. Body weight <50 kg or Body Mass Index (BMI) <18 or >30 kg/m2 at screening. 1.2. A heightened risk of cardiovascular disease, as determined by: an estimated ten year risk of fatal cardiovascular disease of ≥5% at screening, as determined by the Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation (SCORE); history, or evidence at screening, of clinically significant arrhythmia's, prolonged QT-interval or other clinically relevant ECG abnormalities; or a positive family history of cardiac events in 1st or 2nd degree relatives <50 years old. 1.3. A medical history of functional asplenia, sickle cell trait/disease, thalassaemia trait/disease or G6PD-deficiency. 1.4. History of epilepsy in the period of five years prior to study onset, even if no longer on medication. 1.5. Screening tests positive for Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), active Hepatitis B Virus (HBV), Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) 1.6. Chronic use of i) immunosuppressive drugs, ii) antibiotics, iii) or other immune modifying drugs within three months prior to study onset (inhaled and topical corticosteroids and oral anti-histamines exempted) or expected use of such during the study period. 1.7. Any recent or current systemic therapy with an antibiotic or drug with potential anti-malarial activity (chloroquine, doxycycline, tetracycline, piperaquine, benzodiazepine, flunarizine, fluoxetine, tetracycline, azithromycin, clindamycin, erythromycin, hydroxychloroquine, etc.) (allowable timeframe for use at the Investigator's discretion). 1.8. History of malignancy of any organ system (other than localized basal cell carcinoma of the skin), treated or untreated, within the past 5 years. 1.9. Any history of treatment for severe psychiatric disease by a psychiatrist in the past year. 1.10. History of drug or alcohol abuse interfering with normal social function in the period of one year prior to study onset, positive urine toxicology test for cocaine or amphetamines at screening or at inclusion, or positive urine toxicology test for cannabis at inclusion. For female subjects: positive urine pregnancy test at screening and/or at the baseline visit. Abnormal ALT/AST values on baseline Any history of malaria, positive serology for P. falciparum, or previous participation in any malaria (vaccine) study. Known hypersensitivity to or contra-indications (including co-medication) for use of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, piperaquine, chloroquine, Malarone®, artemether-lumefantrine, primaquine or history of severe (allergic) reactions to mosquito bites. Participation in any other clinical study in the 30 days prior to the start of the study or during the study period. Being an employee or student of the department of Medical Microbiology of the Radboudumc or the department of Internal Medicine. Any other condition or situation that would, in the opinion of the investigator, place the subject at an unacceptable risk of injury or render the subject unable to meet the requirements of the protocol. For cohort B (blood stage challenge): Received a blood transfusion in the past. For cohort B (blood stage challenge): Women of childbearing potential with a screening test positive for erythrocyte anti-Rh(c) and/or anti-Rh(e) antibodies.
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Radboud university medical center
City
Nijmegen
State/Province
Gelderland
ZIP/Postal Code
6525 GA
Country
Netherlands

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Citations:
PubMed Identifier
32239171
Citation
Alkema M, Reuling IJ, de Jong GM, Lanke K, Coffeng LE, van Gemert GJ, van de Vegte-Bolmer M, de Mast Q, van Crevel R, Ivinson K, Ockenhouse CF, McCarthy JS, Sauerwein R, Collins KA, Bousema T. A Randomized Clinical Trial to Compare Plasmodium falciparum Gametocytemia and Infectivity After Blood-Stage or Mosquito Bite-Induced Controlled Malaria Infection. J Infect Dis. 2021 Oct 13;224(7):1257-1265. doi: 10.1093/infdis/jiaa157. Erratum In: J Infect Dis. 2020 Sep 14;222(8):1416.
Results Reference
result

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Controlled Human Malaria Infection Model for Evaluation of Transmission-blocking Interventions - Study 2

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