Intermittent Preventive Treatment With Dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine in Papua, Indonesia
Malaria in PregnancyMalaria in pregnancy is a major cause of maternal and neonatal death in Papua, Indonesia. A recent trial in Papua showed that monthly intermittent preventive treatment (IPTp) with the long-acting artemisinin-based combination dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DP) among pregnant women in the second and third trimester was safe, tolerable and more efficacious than the current policy of single screening at antenatal care (ANC) booking and treatment of rapid diagnostic test (RDT)-positive cases. The Ministry of Health (MOH) Indonesia now plans to pilot the strategy in the routine health system in Papua, Indonesia. This study will assess the programme effectiveness of IPTp-DP delivery through antenatal care services and women's adherence to the monthly 3-day DP treatment regimen in a 'real life' setting. The study will be undertaken in ten community health centres in the lowlands and their associated health posts in Timika city. In the first 18 months, MOH will be trained to implement the intervention using quality improvement (QI) approaches to continuously strengthen service delivery, uptake and adherence through plan-do-study-act cycles. The MOH will also be supported to collect safety data for pharmacovigilance. A mixed-methods evaluation will be conducted towards the end of the pilot using exit interviews to assess delivery effectiveness, home visits to assess adherence, and qualitative research to explore provider perceptions of the drivers of successful integration and scalability, and user acceptability. The primary outcome is adherence, defined as the proportion of pregnant women who receive the first dose of IPTp-DP by directly observed therapy (DOT) at ANC, have received the correct number of DP tablets for subsequent doses, and when visited at home have verified they completed the course. The net cost-effectiveness of implementing IPTp-DP and of the current policy of single screening and treatment (SST) in the routine health system will be assessed and compared. Net cost-effectiveness means that cost savings from averted malaria will be deducted from the intervention costs. The incremental financial cost of implementing IPTp-DP from the provider (MOH) perspective at scale in Papua, Indonesia, will also be estimated.
Characterizing Humoral Immune Response to Mosquito Bites
MalariaDengueThe characteristics of the humoral response directed against mosquito saliva antigens are not known precisely. This is a major limitation for using immunological markers as an outcome in epidemiological trials and as an indicator for operational deployment of interventions. Recent advances in the assembly of the genome of some Anopheles and Aedes mosquito vector species has facilitated the identification of new candidate peptides in silico, using the sequences of orthologous salivary gland proteins and B-cell prediction algorithms. The objective of this study is to assess the humoral immune response directed against candidate peptides following controlled exposure to laboratory-adapted colonies of An. minimus, An. maculatus and An. dirus, Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus. This research will provide essential information to identify and validate immunological markers of human exposure to malaria and dengue mosquito vectors in Southeast Asia. Immunological markers would be useful to understand transmission dynamics and predict the risk of transmission as part of a surveillance system, and to assess the efficacy of vector-control interventions in entomological trials or during operational deployment of interventions in the region.
VAC069: A Study of Blood-stage Controlled Human P. Vivax Infection
MalariaVivaxThis is a clinical study to assess the safety and feasibility of Plasmodium vivax (P. vivax) controlled blood-stage human malaria infection (CHMI), by inoculation using a newly created source of P. vivax malaria-infected blood. 25 healthy malaria-naïve UK volunteers, aged 18 - 50, will be recruited through the five phases of the study at the CCVTM, Oxford. Volunteers will undergo primary, secondary and tertiary P. vivax blood-stage challenges, which will be induced by injection of P. vivax infected blood. After the first challenge, the optimal dose for blood-stage CHMI will be selected and used for the second and third challenges. Through each challenge period, volunteers will have blood taken at regular intervals to measure the parasite growth, quantify the sexual parasite forms and assess the immune response to P. vivax infection. Transmission of P. vivax from volunteers to the Anopheline mosquito vectors will also be assessed. In each challenge, following diagnosis, volunteers will be treated with a standard antimalarial course of oral artemether-lumefantrine (Riamet), given over 60 hours. Volunteers who take part in this study will be involved in the trial for approximately 2 years, receiving each of the three challenges at intervals of approximately 5 (and up to 9) months. Volunteers will be followed for 3 months after their last challenge.
Controlled Human Malaria Infection Transmission Model - Phase A
Malaria,FalciparumThis is to develop a model to test the efficacy of vaccines and/or drugs designed to block transmission of malaria to mosquitoes and to identify the targets of transmission-blocking immunity to malaria.
Net Transition Initiative: Efficacy of Two Next-generation Nets for Control of Malaria in Cote d'Ivoire...
MalariaThe investigator plan to conduct a three-arm cluster-randomized control trial which compares two next generation of long-lasting Insecticidal Nets (LLINs); Veeralin®LLIN (PBO-py LLIN), Interceptor G2 (chlorfenapyr-py LLIN) to a standard py-LLIN in the department of Tiebissou Southern Bouake city, central Côte d'Ivoire. The primary objective of the project is to evaluate the efficacy of chlorfenapyr-pyrethroid and piperonyl-butoxide (PBO) synergist-pyrethroid LLINs on malaria case incidence in children aged 6 months to 10 years compared to standard pyrethroid-only LLINs. The secondary objectives are to evaluate the efficacy of the two intervention LLINs compared to the standard LLIN on a) malaria infection prevalence in the general population (both children and adults), b) vector density and c) entomological inoculation rate (EIR) (as a proxy for malaria transmission). In addition, changes in phenotypic resistance intensity and selection for molecular resistance mechanisms at baseline and 12 months post-LLIN distribution, in sentinel villages in each treatment arm will be investigate. It is vital to demonstrate that these next generation LLINs which are becoming the standard of care in Sub Saharan AFRICA, are superior to standard py-LLIN in the most extreme resistance areas as this is likely where alternative interventions will be most needed to keep malaria control on track. The trial will generate the first epidemiological evidence on the efficacy of PBO nets compared to py-LLIN in West Africa.
Comparing Safety and Protective Efficacy of Vaccine Candidate PfSPZ-CVac and MVA ME-TRAP/ ChAd63...
MalariaThis is a single centre, randomized, placebo-controlled phase 1/2 study comparing two malaria vaccine candidates. The first vaccine candidate PfSPZ-CVac (Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites (PfSPZ) challenge administered with a chemoprophylactic antimalarial) will be chemoattenuated in vivo with the antimalarial Pyramax. The second vaccine candidate is prime- target vaccination with viral vectored vaccine candidate regime MVA ME-TRAP (Modified Vaccinia Ankara (MVA) multiple epitope thrombosponin-related adhesion protein (ME-TRAP)) and ChAd63 ME-TRAP (Chimpanzee adenovirus 63 (ChAd63). The safety and protective efficacy of both vaccine candidates will be to assessed by controlled human malaria infection with PfSPZ Challenge strain NF54 administered intravenously by syringe.
Mass Vaccine and Drug Administration, Bangladesh
Plasmodium Falciparum MalariaThis is an open i.e. not blinded, cluster-randomised, controlled intervention study. The study will use a factorial design to estimate the protective effectiveness of mass drug administrations, mass vaccinations, combined mass vaccinations and drug administrations versus the current standard of care.
An MRI Ancillary Study of a Malaria Fever Investigation
Brain InjuriesMalaria4 moreThis study will seek consent from parents of children enrolled in the Malaria FEVER study to obtain neuroimaging and 12-month neuropsychiatric outcomes data and kidney function on their child. The imaging and evaluations for this observational study will occur after the child has recovered from the acute malaria infection and has otherwise completed the RCT intervention and safety evaluations.
FocaL Mass Drug Administration for Vivax Malaria Elimination
MalariaVivax1 moreFLAME is an open-label cluster-randomized controlled trial that aims to determine the effectiveness of focal mass drug administration (fMDA) to reduce the incidence of Plasmodium vivax malaria in the Loreto Department in Peru. Standard interventions, including symptomatic and asymptomatic screening for malaria infections, provision of insecticide-treated bednets, and environmental transmission monitoring, will be compared to clusters of villages randomized to receive anti-malarial drugs.
EaveTubes for Vector Control
MalariaThe goal of this clinical trial is to test whether In2Care EaveTubes (ETs) as a stand-alone tool can reduce malaria in an area where transmission is driven by insecticide-resistant Anopheles gambiae. Children who live in homes with ETs will be monitored for malaria infection and compared to children living in homes without ETs in Côte d'Ivoire where there is universal coverage of long lasting insecticide nets and pyrethroid resistance is high.