Malaria Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Placebo Controlled, Randomised Evaluation of an Eight Week Primaquine Regimen for the Treatment of Vivax Malaria.
Plasmodium vivax represents a major health problem throughout the tropics. Outside Africa it
accounts for over 50% of cases, affecting an estimated 70-80 million people per year. A
substantial proportion of clinical cases are not caused by infective bites of Anopheles spp,
but by activation of latent hypnozoites in the liver. These relapses may significantly
impede development since each illness may result in 5-15 days of absence from work or
school.
Primaquine(PQ) is the only drug available that eliminates hypnozoites, though its use is
beset by clinical problems; it may precipitate haemolytic anaemia in individuals deficient
in the blood enzyme glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD). Without affordable G6PD
testing, primaquine use is precluded. Evidence suggests, however, that a course of 8 weekly
doses may be a safe and effective alternative to the traditional 14 day course of the drug.
The aim of the proposed study, therefore, is to test whether 8 weekly doses of primaquine is
as effective as the 14 day course at preventing relapse malaria, without the risk of
hemolysis in G6PD deficient individuals.
Old evidence suggests that successful PQ therapy is not a function of the length of the
course of treatment, nor the circulating concentration of the drug, but of the total dosage
administered. The same dose administered over 7 days, 14 days, and 8 weeks equally prevented
relapse in vivax malaria. The hemolysis seen in shorter courses is often self-limiting,
suggesting that feedback mechanisms up-regulate production of red cells in response to
haemolytic challenge. The proposed extended course is likely to be well tolerated in G6PD
deficient individuals as a result of these safeguards, especially in this population which
has been exposed to the 5 day PQ regimen for a number of years without reported adverse
effects.
The aim of the study, therefore, is to test whether an 8 week regimen proves effective,
without the associated risk of haemolysis in G6PD deficient individuals. However,
operational concerns remain about adherence to this protracted treatment regimen. Therefore
we will compare the 8 week course in 2 different groups; the first to be directly observed
dosing, the second to be unsupervised dosing using pre-packaged, foil wrapped PQ in
appropriately labelled individual boxes, supplied with strong health education messages.
This would be appropriate for deployment in a resource-poor setting if it proved effective
and safe.
Objectives:
To evaluate whether an eight week primaquine regimen, using single weekly doses, can provide
adequate radical cure of vivax malaria under experimental and operational conditions and is
safe in and acceptable to a population with glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency.
The specific objectives of the study are set out below.
1. Determine the efficacy of an eight-week primaquine regime, using single weekly doses,
in preventing relapses of P. vivax infections following supervised versus unsupervised
administration of the drug.
2. Compare the efficacy and operational aspects (e.g. adherence) between the two week,
eight week supervised and eight week blister package regimes.
3. Monitoring of the effect of 8 week PQ on G6PD deficient individuals.
4. Examine the user acceptability and economic advantages of this course of treatment.
Study population:
Vivax positive individuals from Adizai and Baghicha refugee camps, Pakistan, and Jalalabad,
Afghanistan.
Laboratory Examination:
All suspected malaria cases attending basic health units will have thick and thin blood
films taken and examined by conventional light microscopy. Cases diagnosed with P. vivax
infection will be asked to participate in the study unless the exclusion criteria are met.
All patients will then be tested for G6PD deficiency by near patient testing. The test is a
colorimetric qualitative test for G6PD in red cells requiring 0.05 ml of blood. In addition,
a filter paper blood spot will be collected to allow molecular typing of the parasite. This
will differentiate between a new and a relapse infection.
Design
Randomised placebo controlled study comparing the following four study groups:
1. Initial 3 day chloroquine with supervised weekly placebo for 8 weeks.
2. Initial 3 day chloroquine followed by supervised 14 day primaquine treatment.
3. Initial 3 day chloroquine followed by supervised 8 week primaquine treatment (45 mg /
week).
All patients will be given health education messages and strongly advised to complete the
course. In addition a safety arm will be used for G6PD deficient patients; this will be used
to compare PCV with group 3 (above). This will be an 8 week regimen, administered by direct
observation, and will receive close monitoring for haemolysis.
Treatment:
All patients will be given a full therapeutic course of chloroquine. Primaquine will be
administered to the study groups according to the respective protocol schedule. All relapses
and new cases will be re-treated using the same regime and procedure as at the time of
admission.
Monitoring:
Patients in treatment groups 1, 2, and 3 will be monitored for the initial 8 weeks of
treatment for adverse events; G6PD deficient patients will be monitored for signs of
hemolysis every other day for the first 2 weeks of treatment and then once per week (prior
to dosing) until completion of the course. Following the treatment period, patients will be
monitored for 1 year for the following outcomes:
Primary Efficacy Variable: Proportion with relapse(s) of P. vivax in 12 months of follow-up.
Secondary Efficacy Variables: Time to subsequent relapse episode, number of relapse episodes
in 12 months, side effects / adverse events
Patients will be advised to return to the BHU in the event of recurrent symptoms within 12
months following enrolment to the study. A patient will be deemed to have completed the
study after 12 months of follow-up. In any event each patient will be contacted once every 2
weeks during the follow-up period in order to collect relevant information. At each episode,
a sample of blood will allow molecular typing of the parasite and define whether the patient
has a new infection or a relapse.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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