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Active clinical trials for "Malaria"

Results 101-110 of 1231

Perennial Malaria Chemoprevention (PMC) in Côte d'Ivoire

MalariaAnemia

The Plus Project will assess the impact, operational feasibility, efficacy, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness of PMC. Specifically, the impact evaluation will involve monitoring a passive cohort of all children in the study area reporting all doses of SP received and the number of confirmed cases of malaria and anaemia, as well as a prospective active cohort of children who will have seven home visits over an 18-month period. The total number of participants is expected to be approximately 1568 children in the areas served by 19 health centres in Côte d'Ivoire. The results of this study will allow direct evaluation of the protective efficacy of PMC on malaria incidence, severe anaemia, and malaria mortality.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Pharmacokinetic Study of IV Aresunate to Treat Children With Severe Malaria

Plasmodium Falciparum Infection

This clinical study is a phase 4, single-site, open-label pharmacokinetic (PK) study of IV artesunate in up to 100 Ugandan children 6 months-14 years of age who are diagnosed with severe malaria according to standardized World Health Organization (WHO) criteria (any P. falciparum parasitemia and the presence of danger signs). Participants will receive the standard of care IV artesunate for initial treatment of severe malaria per WHO guidelines: children weighing <20 kg should receive 3.0 mg/kg/dose compared to children weighing =20 kg who should receive 2.4 mg/kg/dose, at times 0, 12, 24, 48 and 72 hours (WHO 2015). Parenteral treatment will be administered for a minimum of 24 hours (irrespective of the patient's ability to tolerate oral medication earlier), after which patients will be evaluated clinically and assessed for ability for oral intake of antimalarials. Children who are able to transition to oral antimalarial therapy will initiate a 3-day course of artemisinin-combination oral therapy per national guidelines. The primary objective of the study is to determine the relationship between DHA exposures following IV artesunate dosing and markers of physiologic dysfunction associated with severe malaria in Ugandan children.

Not yet recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Southeast Asia Dose Optimization of Tafenoquine

Plasmodium Vivax Malaria

Tafenoquine was recently approved by regulatory authorities in the USA and Australia. Tafenoquine is an alternative radical curative treatment to primaquine acting against the dormant liver stage of Plasmodium vivax (the hypnozoite). Tafenoquine (an 8-aminoquinoline) has the substantial advantage of single dosing as compared to a 14-day course of primaquine to achieve radical cure. The recommended tafenoquine dose is 300 mg, which was shown to be significantly worse in radical curative efficacy to a total primaquine dose of 3.5 mg/kg in Southeast Asia. The cure rate of tafenoquine 300 mg in Southeast Asian study sites was only 74%. The comparator 3.5 mg/kg total primaquine dose is the standard and most commonly used dose globally, but in Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific, higher doses of primaquine are needed for radical cure. This study aims to determine the optimal dose of tafenoquine in Southeast Asia.

Not yet recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Spatial Repellents for Vector Control

Malaria

The primary objective of the study is to demonstrate and quantify the protective efficacy of a single Spatial Repellent (SR) product, in reducing malaria infection in a human cohort. The study design will be a prospective cluster Randomized Control Trial (cRCT).

Active10 enrollment criteria

Spatial Repellents for the Prevention of Malaria in Kenya

Malaria

Spatial repellents are chemical-based devices that when placed in a room, make that room non-conducive for mosquitoes. These tools can be used to help in the fight against vector borne diseases such as malaria and dengue. However, their efficacy in reducing mosquito biting and therefore malaria transmission has never been evaluated in Africa. This study will evaluate the efficacy of a spatial repellent in reducing mosquito biting on human beings and measure the impact any reduced biting will have on malaria transmission. The investigators will recruit and follow-up 5,984 children between 6 months and <10 years of age in Busia County to determine how many times they will be infected with malaria in villages where the investigators will have distributed spatial repellents and compare the rate of infection to villages where the investigators will not have distributed the repellent devices. Additionally, the investigators will measure whether the distribution of spatial repellents in one village will drive mosquitoes to their neighboring houses thereby increasing malaria transmission in those areas. The children participating in the study will be divided into 3 groups (cohorts). The first group will be followed up during the first 4 months before any intervention is distributed and the purpose here will be to determine that the villages are comparable. After this, the investigators will recruit the next group of participants and follow them up for 1 year and repeat this again for another year. During the follow-up, the children will be asked to come to the health facility where they will be tested for malaria using RDT or blood slide for microscopy. Every two weeks, a member of the study team will come to the participant's house and ask them if they had any history of fever. If the participants had fever, they will be tested for malaria. All children who turn out to be positive for malaria by RDT will be treated free of charge. At the same time, the investigators shall also perform mosquito collections to determine the impact of spatial repellents on the density of Anopheles mosquitoes.

Active17 enrollment criteria

Radical CUREfor MAlaria Among Highly Mobile and Hard-to-reach Populations in the Guyanese Shield...

MalariaVivax

The investigators are proposing a new malaria control strategy to reach the group of garimpeiros not reached by the usual actions of the health services. As it is a complex strategy, several evaluation mechanisms have been designed. The main characteristics of the research are: Access to the target population: our target population is represented by miners active and mobile in the south of the Guiana Shield, between Amapá (Brazil), French Guiana (France) and Suriname. To overcome the obstacles posed by the remoteness and clandestinity of the communities of interest, our intervention will take place in the logistical and support hubs (staging areas) of the miners, located in the border regions between the above territories. Thus, it will take advantage of their periodic mobility between these bases and the gold mining sites, and reach the target population where it can be easily accessed. The intervention will be combined and will include a common core (malaria health education activity) and two modules that will be offered to participants. Each participant (meeting the inclusion criteria) will be able to choose between participating to one or both modules. The common core of health education will focus on malaria: its causes, means of prevention, the main differences between P. falciparum and P. vivax disease, the importance of a complete treatment against any form of Plasmodium spp. Module A of the intervention will be treatment targeting asymptomatic individuals at risk of carrying P. vivax. The aim of this module is to prevent relapses and reduce the number of human hosts able to transmitthe parasite. Module B of the intervention will correspond to the provision, after appropriate training, of a Malakit self-test and self-treatment kit. The aim of this module is to provide access to quality diagnosis and treatment for episodes of symptoms consistent with malaria that occur in situations of extreme remoteness from health services. The purpose of this study is to evaluate a strategy that, if appropriate, can be implemented by health authorities in countries with residual malaria transmission in populations with characteristics similar to our study population. The investigators will therefore use a pragmatic approach so that the conclusions drawn can be transposed as easily as possible to real life, while at the same time putting great effort into the safety of the intervention. Thus, the study field workers who will administer the intervention will have a similar profile to health workers recruited by a large number of malaria control programmes, particularly in remote areas. In addition, monitoring will be simplified and monitoring data can be collected both through face-to-face visits and remotely administered questionnaires. The investigators chose to design many of the components of the intervention and study with a participatory approach. In order to generate the data necessary for health authorities to potentially take ownership of the intervention in the future, the study will evaluate two aspects of the intervention: effectiveness and implementation. First, the investigators want to evaluate the population-scale effectiveness ofthe intervention to reduce malaria transmission with a quasi-experimental approach. Secondly, the investigators will analyse the implementation of theintervention, and generate valuable knowledge for further implementation within local health services. This evaluation will be carried out through the components of the CUREMA study: the intervention itself, pre/post-intervention cross-sectional surveys, a nested cohort, the qualitative component and the modelling of epidemiological surveillance data. • The implementation of these components will have an expected duration of approximately 27 months, the start of inclusions is scheduled for September 2022.

Not yet recruiting26 enrollment criteria

Safety and Immune Responses After Vaccination With an Investigational RNA-based Vaccine Against...

Malaria

This first-in-human clinical trial, is a dose escalation multi-center trial designed to assess the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of the vaccine component, BNT165b1, an ribonucleic acid (RNA)-lipid nanoparticle (LNP) encoding for part of the Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite protein (PfCSP). BNT165b1 will be evaluated at three dose levels (DLs) to select a safe and tolerable dose in a 3-dose schedule.

Active53 enrollment criteria

Safety and Immunogenicity of Pvs25-IMX313/Matrix-M1 Vaccine

MalariaVivax

This is an open-label, single-centre, non-randomised, first-in-human Phase Ia study to assess the safety and immunogenicity of the Pvs25-IMX313 vaccine, administered in Matrix-M1 adjuvant.

Active36 enrollment criteria

Plasmodium Immunotherapy for Advanced Ovarian Cancer

Advanced Ovarian Cancer

The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of Plasmodium immunotherapy in the treatment of advanced ovarian cancer. This study plans to enroll 30 patients with advanced ovarian cancer. Each patient is inoculated with Plasmodium vivax 1-5 × 10^6, observe the time when the parasite is detected in the peripheral blood of the subjects after the inoculation of Plasmodium, the change of the parasite density in the peripheral blood of the whole treatment cycle and the control effect of the drug on the parasite density, the main clinical symptoms and signs, laboratory test indicators, immunological test indicators and changes in the quality of life. To evaluate the safety and tolerance of the subjects to Plasmodium immunotherapy, as well as the changes of tumor related indicators and immunological indicators.

Not yet recruiting32 enrollment criteria

Triple Artemisinin-based Combination Therapy for Delaying Drug Resistance Development - a Randomized...

Uncomplicated Plasmodium Falciparum Malaria

Background: Artemisinin resistance has emerged in parts of Southeast Asia, and there are reports in Africa of reduced susceptibility of Plasmodium falciparum parasites against artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT). No new drugs are available in the pipeline to replace ACTs in case they fail. This study aims to assess whether a sequential administration of triple ACTs with different partner-drugs can improve the efficacy of ACT for treatment of uncomplicated malaria. Methods: A health facility-based, three-arm partially blinded randomized clinical trial will be conducted to assess efficacy and safety of a sequential administration of artemether-lumefantrine followed immediately by artesunate-amodiaquine (AL+ASAQ) or artemether-lumefantrine with by amodiaquine (AL+AQ) compared to artemether-lumefantrine plus placebo (AL+PBO). Eligible children aged 6 - 120 months and with microscopy confirmed uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria will be enrolled, administered with trial medicines and followed-up at 0 (just prior to first drug intake) and 8 hours on day 0, 12 hourly on days 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, followed by once daily on days 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 21, 28, 35, 42 and 56 for clinical and laboratory evaluations. Clinical evaluation will involve assessment of signs and symptoms related to the disease and or trial medicine during follow-up. Laboratory evaluation will include microscopic determination of presence of malaria parasites and species, hemoglobin level, molecular analysis for markers of drug resistance and to differentiate recrudescence from new infection. The primary outcome will be Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)-adjusted adequate clinical and parasitological cure rate on days 28 and 42. Expected outcomes: The findings will give an insight on whether 3 ACTs are more efficacious than the use of first-line regimen alone, and are tolerable for treatment of uncomplicated falciparum malaria.

Not yet recruiting17 enrollment criteria
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