Malaria, Falciparum Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Efficacy and Cost-effectiveness of Malaria Prevention in Pregnancy in an Area of Low and Unstable Transmission in Kabale, Uganda: Use of Intermittent Preventive Treatment and Insecticide-treated Nets.
The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of three
alternative strategies for the prevention of malaria during pregnancy in an epidemic-prone
area of low transmission in the East African Highlands.
The strategies being compared are:
- intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (IPT-SP)
- an insecticide treated net (ITN), and
- intermittent preventive treatment with SP plus an ITN
In addition to the main individually-randomised trial, outcome data was subsequently also
gathered on pregnant women whose houses where sprayed with indoor residual insecticides
(IRS) as part of a non-randomised district-wide control programme to compare the impact of
IRS with the three intervention arms.
Susceptibility to malaria infection during pregnancy and the severity of clinical
manifestation are determined by the level of pre-pregnancy immunity, which depends on
intensity and stability of malaria transmission. Most intervention trials to prevent malaria
during pregnancy have been conducted in areas of intense transmission. The results of trials
conducted in high-transmission areas may not be applicable to low transmission areas, where
malaria is less frequent but the risk of spontaneous abortion and stillbirth is very high in
women of all parities due to lack of sufficient malaria immunity. Routine chemoprophylaxis
is generally not recommended in areas of unstable malaria transmission. However,
intermittent treatment with an effective anti-malarial drug may be beneficial, especially
during periods of malaria transmission. Little work has been carried out amongst pregnant
women living in areas of low and unstable transmission in Africa. No data are available on
the cost-effectiveness of malaria control in low transmission settings.
This study will compare the efficacy and cost effectiveness of three preventive strategies
for the control of malaria during pregnancy in low-transmission settings. The study is
located in Kabale district, a highland area in SW Uganda.
Women attending antenatal care are randomised to receive either:
- intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (IPT-SP)
- an insecticide treated net (ITN), or
- intermittent preventive treatment with SP and an ITN. It is hypothesized that when
combined with IPT-SP, the additional impact of ITNs by reducing exposure may be
greatest where the intensity of transmission is low.
In addition to the main individually-randomised trial, outcome data was subsequently also
gathered on pregnant women whose houses where sprayed with indoor residual insecticides
(IRS) as part of a non-randomised district-wide control programme to compare the impact of
IRS with the three intervention arms.
The study aims to identify the most effective intervention strategies suited to areas
characterised by low and unstable transmission. Research findings should be applicable to
other hypoendemic areas of the East African highlands.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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