Malaria Clinical Trial
Official title:
Characterization of Novel Molecular Tools for the Epidemiological Surveillance of Antimalarial Drug Resistance in Mali
Resistance of Plasmodium falciparum (malaria) to current antimalarial drugs and the
continuing development of resistance to new antimalarial formulations is one of the major
obstacles to effective malaria control and case management. Efficient, comprehensive and
validated methods for monitoring drug resistance in advance of the development of resistance
to the antimalarial drugs that are in use are urgently needed. Molecular markers of genetic
polymorphisms that give rise to resistant P. falciparum parasites and methods in population
genetics for evaluating the data can be valuable tools for monitoring drug resistance in the
field. This study aims to:
1. Prospectively measure the in vivo response of P. falciparum malaria in Mali to several
different antimalarial drugs and drug combinations: chloroquine (CQ),
sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP), amodiaquine (AQ), sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine in
combination with amodiaquine (SP/AQ), amodiaquine in combination with artesunate
(AQ/AS), sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine in combination with artesunate (SP/AS), and
artemether-lumefantrine (Co-artem). In one site with preliminary data showing a high
rate of P. falciparum resistance to mefloquine (MQ), this drug will also be tested.
2. Measure the frequencies of molecular markers for antimalarial drug resistance, and
examine how those results relate to the efficacy of these drugs in treating clinical
malaria
3. Measure drug levels at 3 days and correlate with efficacy results.
4. Examine early clinical, parasitologic, and clinical predictors of late treatment
failure.
5. Use the knowledge gained in Aims 1-3 to develop a molecular tool for a countrywide
resistance surveillance system for antimalarial drugs.
Resistance of Plasmodium falciparum to current antimalarial drugs and the continuing
development of resistance to new antimalarial formulations is one of the major obstacles to
effective malaria control and case management. Parasite populations are highly resistant to
chloroquine on an almost worldwide basis (Central America and Haiti being the exceptions)
and resistance to the next line of treatment, SP, is widespread in Asia and large parts of
East Africa and South America. SP is also now recommended for use as intermittent
preventative treatment (IPT) in pregnancy, which adds to concerns about the development and
spread of SP resistance. More expensive combination drug therapy using artesunate and other
antimalarials in combination is increasingly being recommended in an effort to extend the
useful life of drugs and to slow the spread of antimalarial drug resistance. In all
likelihood, resistance will eventually emerge for any new single drug or combination
formulation that we deploy in the field.
Given the above, efficient, comprehensive and validated methods for monitoring drug
resistance in advance of the development of resistance to the antimalarial drugs that are in
use are urgently needed. Such methods would help malaria control and prevention programs in
guiding national treatment recommendations and policies. Integrating laboratory expertise,
analytic methods based on population genetics, and more traditional methods of surveillance
for anti-malarial drug resistance (e.g. in vivo drug efficacy studies) and networking with
national and international partners will result in a multidisciplinary, geographically
diverse team approach to assessing and monitoring drug resistant malaria, as well as
developing and validating molecular methods. This type of effort will greatly assist in
maximizing the useful life span of antimalarial drugs and in providing evidence-based
guidance for drug policy decisions.
Specific Aims:
1. Prospectively measure the in vivo response of P. falciparum malaria in Mali to CQ, SP,
AQ, SP/AQ in combination, AQ/artesunate (AS) in combination, SP/AS, and
artemether-lumefantrine (Co-artem). In one site with preliminary data showing a high
rate of P. falciparum resistance to MQ, MQ will also be tested.
2. Measure the frequencies of dihydrofolate reductase (dhfr), dihydropteroate synthetase
(dhps), P. falciparum chloroquine resistance transporter (pfcrt) and P. falciparum
multi-drug resistant (pfmdr 1) genotypes and establish their relationship with in vivo
resistance to SP (dhfr and dhps), CQ, AQ, SP/AQ, AQ/AS, SP/AS, and MQ.
3. Measure drug levels at 3 days and correlate with in vivo efficacy results.
4. Examine early clinical, parasitologic, and clinical predictors of late treatment
failure.
5. Use the knowledge gained in Aims 1-3 to develop a molecular tool for a countrywide
resistance surveillance system for SP, AQ, and MQ.
Study Design:
The study will entail two consecutive years of prospective 28 day in vivo drug efficacy
studies carried out during the rainy season in three different malaria transmission sites:
Koro (rural town with 71% of resistance to MQ at a lower dose of 15 mg/kg), Pongono (rural
town with little exposure to antimalarials) and Faladje (rural village with > 30% of
chloroquine resistance). Children aged 6-59 months with clinical symptoms consistent with
malaria will be enrolled in the study after screening for fever (axillary temperature >=37.5
C) and malaria asexual parasites identified by microscopic examination of thick blood films.
Blood spotted onto filter papers will be collected prior to treatment and during follow up.
These filter paper samples will be used for the molecular detection of drug
resistance-conferring gene polymorphisms as well as the HPLC detection and quantification of
the respective drugs and their relevant metabolites. In vivo data interpretation will be
done using the WHO 28-day protocol (WHO, 2003) and molecular markers will be used for the
determination of the genotype resistance index (GRI). Venous blood will be collected at
enrollment and at the time of in vivo failure to measure in vitro drug efficacy and
cryopreserve parasites to search for novel molecular markers to new antimalarial drugs.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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