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Active clinical trials for "Malaria"

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Strengthening the Evidence for Policy on the RTS,S/AS01 Malaria Vaccine

Malaria

The ongoing Malaria Vaccine Pilot Evaluation (MVPE) is being conducted in Ghana, Malawi and Kenya through community and sentinel hospital surveillance systems and a series of household surveys (to measure vaccine coverage). The Malaria Vaccine Pilot Evaluation-Case Control (MVPE-CC) registered here as observational study is embedded within MVPE comprising case-control studies of clinical and mortality outcomes. Each case will require four controls, and caregiver informed consent will be required prior to study activities. These observational case control studies will measure as complementary information to what is being collected through MVPE: Safety among children who received the malaria vaccine, with focus on cerebral malaria, meningitis and severe malaria The impact of the malaria vaccine on all-cause mortality for boys and girls, AND Promote use of case-control approaches by Expanded Programmes on Immunization (EPI) and malaria control programmes.

Active5 enrollment criteria

Safety Evaluation of PfSPZ Vaccine in Pregnant Women in Mali (MalVIP1)

Malaria

Background: Malaria is a disease that affects many people in Africa. It is caused by germs carried by some mosquitoes. A person bitten by an infected mosquito will get malaria. Most malaria infections cause only mild symptoms or none at all, but sometimes the disease can be deadly. Malaria can also harm pregnant women. They may lose their pregnancies or deliver too early, and the mother and newborn may die. An experimental malaria vaccine (PfSPZ) has shown some protection against malaria infection. It is not yet known if PfSPZ is safe for pregnant women. Objective: To test the PfSPZ vaccine in pregnant women. Eligibility: Healthy women aged 18 to 34 years at 14 to 32 weeks gestation with 1 fetus. Design: The study will be in Mali. Participants will have about 40 clinic visits over 20 months. They will be screened. They will have an ultrasound exam and a test of their heart function. They will have blood and urine tests. Participants will receive an injection through a needle into a vein on 3 visits over 1 month. Some will receive the PfSPZ vaccine; others will be injected with salt water. They will not know which injection they are getting. After the last injection, participants will visit the clinic every 2 weeks. They will have blood tests at each visit. After giving birth, participants and their infants will visit the clinic every 2 weeks for 4 months; then they will have visits each month until the infant is 1 year old. The infant will be examined and will have blood tests at each visit.

Suspended66 enrollment criteria

Safety, Tolerability & Pharmacokinetics (PK) of Co-administered Single Doses of OZ439 and Mefloquine...

Malaria

OZ439 is a novel, synthetic trioxolane medicine which is related to artemisinin, but has the advantage of a longer elimination half-life so is being developed to be administered together with a potential partner drug e.g. mefloquine as a single dose cure for uncomplicated malaria. The study findings will be used to inform the dose and design of future studies. The aim of the study is to establish the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of co-administered OZ439 and MQ at a range of doses up to the maximum tolerated dose, in healthy volunteers.

Terminated19 enrollment criteria

Study to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Tafenoquine for the Treatment of Plasmodium Vivax in...

MalariaPlasmodium Vivax

This Phase II study is designed to determine whether a single 600 mg dose or 400mg/day for 3 days of tafenoquine is efficacious, and well tolerated for clearing P. vivax malaria infection (blood schizontocidal and gametocytocidal activity) and preventing P. vivax relapse (hypnozoite eradication). It will also further establish the safety and tolerability of these doses of tafenoquine.

Terminated20 enrollment criteria

Comparative Evaluation of the Safety and the Efficacy of 2 Antimalarials Depending on HIV Status...

Plasmodium Falciparum Malaria

The purpose of this study is to determine the safety and efficacy of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) versus artemether-lumefantrine (Coartem) when administered to HIV+ and HIV- patients with uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria. Patients will be randomised to one of the 2 treatment and followed up (until day 14 actively) for 45 days.

Terminated10 enrollment criteria

IPT and Efficacy of Sulphadoxine/Pyrimethamine and Chlorproguanil/Dapsone in 6-59 Month Old Children...

Malaria

Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in infants is a promising strategy to reduce incidence of clinical malaria in children under the age of 1 year. It is likely to be implemented as a malaria control strategy in Tanzania using sulfadoxine/pyremethamine SP. SP is failing as a first line treatment for clinical episodes of malaria and government policy is driving a change to use Artemesin Combination Therapy (ACT). The main ongoing Kilimanjaro IPTi study is looking at alternatives to SP for use in IPTi. Currently, as there is no evidence for the use of other drugs for IPT, SP will be continued for IPT in pregnancy and in infants. This study proposes to measure the efficacy of SP and chlorproguanil/dapsone (CD), in symptomatic 6- 59 month old children using standard methodology. These are both study drugs in the main IPTi study. This will help us to see how the efficacies of SP and CD in sick children relate to the efficacies for treating asymptomatic children with IPTi. In addition this proposal aims to test the efficacy of SP given to 2-10 month old asymptomatic infants (the target group for IPTi). Evidence suggests that asymptomatic malaria infections with low parasitaemia have a higher cure rate than symptomatic infections with high parasitaemia even when markers of resistance are highly prevalent. This second study aims to quantify this difference and will produce evidence to help policy makers know when drugs used for IPTi should be changed. Both studies will be open label and run concurrently in Hale, Korogwe district near to the main Kilimanjaro IPTi site in Tanzania.

Terminated32 enrollment criteria

Azithromycin Plus Chloroquine Versus Sulfadoxine-Pyrimethamine Plus Chloroquine For The Treatment...

MalariaFalciparum

The primary objective is to confirm the hypothesis that azithromycin (optimal dose once daily for three days) plus chloroquine is non-inferior to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine plus chloroquine for the treatment of uncomplicated, symptomatic malaria due to P. falciparum.

Terminated19 enrollment criteria

Preventing Malaria in School Children to Protect the Whole Community in Rural Blantyre District,...

Malaria,FalciparumAnemia in Children

This is an individually randomized, controlled, single blind four arm clinical trial of malaria chemoprevention strategies Arm 1: Intermittent preventive treatment with dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (IPT-DP). Arm 2: Intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) plus chloroquine (CQ) (IPT-SPCQ). Arm 3: Intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) plus amodiaquine (AQ) (IPT-SPAQ).Arm 4: Control - students will receive standard of care (no preventive treatment). Outcomes include P. falciparum infection and parasite density, anemia, cognitive function and educational testing, as well as infection prevalence and disease incidence in young children sleeping student's households to assess the impact on transmission.

Not yet recruiting18 enrollment criteria

LLIN Evaluation in Uganda Project (LLINEUP3)

Malaria

In Uganda, the National Malaria Control Division (NMCD) and implementing partners are planning to deliver long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) nationwide, through a mass distribution campaign in 2023. LLINs will be distributed free-of-charge to all Ugandan households, aiming to achieve universal coverage. LLINs treated with a pyrethroid insecticide plus chlorfenapyr (PermaNet Dual, Vestergaard) and LLINs treated with a pyrethroid insecticide plus PBO (PermaNet 3.0, Vestergaard) will be distributed as part of this distribution campaign, presenting an opportunity to rigorously evaluate and compare these two LLINs at scale across Uganda. In collaboration with the MOH, this cluster-randomised trial will compare the impact of LLINs combining chlorfenapyr with a pyrethroid to LLINs combining PBO with a pyrethroid into Uganda's 2023 LLIN distribution campaign, as was done successfully at the time of the last LLIN distribution campaign conducted in 2020-21. A major strength of this trial is the use of malaria incidence as the primary outcome measure. Incidence of malaria, defined as the number of symptomatic cases of malaria occurring in a population at risk over time, is the gold standard for assessing malaria burden. However, cluster-randomised trials using malaria incidence as the primary outcome typically involve study cohorts and are very expensive and logistically challenging. The novel approach for measuring malaria incidence is to utilize data collected routinely at health facilities. By defining target areas around health facilities and collecting data on the location of residence of patients diagnosed with malaria, this study will be able to generate longitudinal measures of malaria incidence at an unprecedented scale across Uganda as done in the LLINEUP2 trial (NCT04566510). These results will inform policies and programmes for malaria and potentially provide evidence to support widescale deployment of dual AI chlorfenapyr-pyrethroid LLINs. This study, the first evaluating PermaNet Dual LLINs, will also provide evidence for a second in class chlorfenapyr net, a potential tool to be added to the malaria control tool kit.

Not yet recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Improving Neonatal Health Through Rapid Malaria Testing in Early Pregnancy With High-Sensitivity...

Malaria,FalciparumMalaria in Pregnancy7 more

The purpose of the INTREPiD study is to compare 1st trimester screening for malaria parasites with a high-sensitivity malaria rapid diagnostic test followed by treatment of test-positive women with artemether-lumefantrine (AL) against usual antenatal care on a composite adverse pregnancy outcome including low birth weight, small for gestational age, preterm, fetal loss, or neonatal death.

Not yet recruiting11 enrollment criteria
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