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Active clinical trials for "Malaria"

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Evaluation of Community-based Mass Screening and Treatment for Malaria in Western Kenya

Malaria,Falciparum

This study is a cluster-randomized controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of community-based mass screening with a malaria rapid diagnostic test, and treatment of participants with positive tests with an appropriate antimalarial for reducing malaria transmission indices.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Efficacy and Safety of KAF156 in Combination With LUM-SDF in Adults and Children With Uncomplicated...

Acute Uncomplicated Plasmodium Falciparum Malaria

This study was designed to determine the most effective and tolerable dose at the shortest dosing regimen of the investigational drug KAF156 in combination with a solid dispersion formulation of lumefantrine (LUM-SDF) in adult/adolescent and pediatric patients with uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria. There is unmet medical need for anti-malarial treatment with new mechanism of action to reduce probability of developing resistance, and for duration shorter than 3 days of treatment and/or reduced pill burden.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

Effect of Paracetamol on Renal Function in Plasmodium Knowlesi Malaria

Malaria

Acute kidney injury is a common complication of severe Plasmodium knowlesi malaria, and an important contributor to mortality. The exact pathogenic mechanisms of AKI in knowlesi malaria are not known, however it is hypothesised that haemolysis of red blood cells and subsequent release of cell-free haemoglobin leads to oxidative stress and lipid peroxidation in the renal tubules. A novel mechanism of paracetamol was recently demonstrated, showing that paracetamol acts as a potent inhibitor of hemoprotein-catalyzed lipid peroxidation. In a proof of concept trial, paracetamol at therapeutic levels was shown to significantly decrease oxidative kidney injury and improve renal function by inhibiting the hemoprotein-catalyzed lipid peroxidation in a rat model of rhabdomyolysis-induced renal injury. The investigators hypothesize that this novel inhibitory mechanism of paracetamol may provide renal protection in adults with knowlesi malaria by reducing the hemoprotein-induced lipid peroxidation that occurs in haemolytic conditions. As there is currently no consensus that exists concerning adequate medical treatment for severe malaria complicated by intravascular haemolysis and AKI, the potential application of paracetamol would be of benefit, especially as it is safe and widely available.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Efficacy of Artesunate-amodiaquine and Artemether-lumefantrine for Uncomplicated Malaria in South...

Malaria

This will be an open-randomised non-inferiority study to test the hypothesis that the risk of recurrent parasitaemia after 42 days is not worse in the group receiving the Artesunate-Amodiaquine (ASAQ) regimen than in the group receiving the Artemether-Lumefantrine (Coartem®) regimen. Children with uncomplicated malaria meeting the inclusion criteria will be enrolled (after their parent/caretaker has given informed consent), treated on site with the drugs under evaluation and followed-up for a period of 42 days. Drugs will be given under direct supervision, either at the clinic or at home. Follow-up shall consist of a fixed schedule of clinical and laboratory examinations. Based on clinical and laboratory findings, children will be classified as therapeutic failures (early or late) or adequate responders. The proportion of cases experiencing an in vivo therapeutic failure during the follow-up period will provide an estimate of the efficacy of the drug regimens. A Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) analysis will be carried out to differentiate true recrudescence due to treatment failure from episodes of re-infection. This proposal is compliant with the latest WHO recommendations for anti-malarial efficacy monitoring in high, medium or low transmission zones11.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

A Randomized Controlled Trial on Malaria Primaquine Treatment in Timika, Indonesia (TRIPI)

Uncomplicated Malaria

Plasmodium vivax can form dormant liver stages that reactivate weeks or months following an acute infection. Recurrent infections can be associated with a febrile illness, a cumulative risk of severe anaemia, and even mortality. In co-endemic areas the risk of recurrence after both P. vivax and P. falciparum infections can be over 50% within 3 months. The only drug we have to kill P. vivax hypnozoites is primaquine which is currently given as a 14 day regimen. In Papua a retrospective study found very low effectiveness for unsupervised treatment. If true this has profound effects on treatment policy, suggesting that greater efforts are needed to encourage adherence to treatment. We propose a cluster randomized, controlled, open label trial to assess the effectiveness of unsupervised versus supervised primaquine treatment in patients with uncomplicated malaria. Since the risk of recurrent P. vivax is high in patients with either P. vivax or P. falciparum, both infections will be included in the study. The study will be conducted in Mimika, in the southern part of Papua Province, Indonesia. Participants will be enrolled at village health posts and provided with schizontocidal treatment plus primaquine radical cure which will be either supervised or unsupervised depending on which cluster the clinic is in. Participants will be followed up for 6 months and assessed in regular intervals for the presence of patent and sub-patent malaria. The outcome of the study will contribute to an improved treatment scheme for uncomplicated malaria in this area.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

A Study to Assess the Effects of Dissolution Profile on the Pharmacokinetics of Single Oral Doses...

MalariaVivax

This study will investigate the effect of Tafenoquine (TQ) 150 mg tablet ageing (dissolution profiles) on human exposure of TQ comparing the relative bioavailability of TQ from tablets exhibiting different dissolution profiles in healthy subjects. This is a single-centre, 2-arm, randomized open-label, parallel-group study in healthy subjects. All subjects will arrive in the unit approximately 24 hours prior to dosing and will be discharged after the 72-hour post-dose assessments are completed. Subjects will return for outpatient visits on Days 7, 14, 21, 28, and 56 after dosing. A total of 14 subjects (n=7 subjects in each arm) are planned to be enrolled. All subjects will receive a single dose of study medication (2x150 mg TQ tablets + 30 mg TQ SIL in solution) and participate through a 56-day post dose follow-up visit. To enable the application of peripheral microsampling in planned paediatric studies, a comparison of the measured pharmacokinetic (PK) exposure via peripheral blood collection (via microsampling) to venous collection will also be performed in this study.

Completed27 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Weekly Tafenoquine

Malaria

This study is a phase 2b, placebo controlled, randomized, blinded study of the efficacy of WR 238605, a new primaquine analog, compared to placebo as chemosuppression of P. falciparum malaria in Nyanza Province, western Kenya.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

A Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Evaluation of Increasing Doses of Weekly Tafenoquine...

Malaria

This was a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to compare the efficacy of a range four weekly doses of tafenoquine, and weekly mefloquine, with placebo as chemosuppression of P. falciparum malaria. Medications and placebo were matched and a double-dummy technique enabled blinding of tafenoquine versus mefloquine.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Study to Compare the Triple ACT AL+AQ With the ACT AL in Cambodia and Vietnam

MalariaFalciparum

This study is a multi-centre, open-label randomised trial to assess the efficacy, safety and tolerability of the Triple ACT artemether-lumefantrine+amodiaquine (AL+AQ) compared to the ACT artemether-lumefantrine (AL) in uncomplicated falciparum malaria in Cambodia and Vietnam. The estimated total sample size is 600 patients from 2 sites in Cambodia and 2 sites in Vietnam. There are 2 treatment arms Arm 1: Artemether-lumefantrine for 3 days Arm 2: Artemether-lumefantrine for 3 days plus Amodiaquine for 3 days. According to the World Health Organization guideline, all patients except children under 10 kilograms will also be treated with a single dose of primaquine as a gametocytocidal treatment. Funder :Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) Grant reference number: OPP1132628

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Reactive Focal Mass Drug Administration (rfMDA) +/- Reactive Focal Vector Control...

Malaria

This is a cluster randomised controlled trial with factorial study design comparing the impact of reactive community-based malaria interventions: 1) presumptive treatment (or rfMDA, reactive focal mass drug administration) versus reactive case detection (RACD), and 2) reactive IRS (indoor residual spraying) versus control on the incidence of malaria in Namibia.

Completed92 enrollment criteria
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