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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00471666
Other study ID # 999907148
Secondary ID 07-I-N148
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received May 9, 2007
Last updated June 30, 2017
Start date May 7, 2007
Est. completion date January 31, 2012

Study information

Verified date January 31, 2012
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

This study will examine the clinical, immunological and epidemiological effects of concurrent infections with P. falciparum and W. bancrofti or M. perstans (the parasites that cause malaria and filariasis) on the frequency and severity of malaria infection in children and young adults in Mali, Africa.

Residents of Tien gu bougou and Bougoudiana, Mali, who are between 1 and 20 years of age may be eligible for this study. Participants with and without filarial infection will be enrolled.

Participants undergo the following tests and procedures:

- Baseline evaluation with medical history and physical examination, blood tests and stool culture

- Brief physical examinations weekly

- Blood tests monthly for malaria

- Standard treatment offered for anyone with malaria

- Blood tests for filarial infection at the beginning, midpoint and end of the transmission season

- Treatment for lymphatic filariasis is available through the National Program for the Elimination of Lymphatic Filariasis. There is no effective standard therapy for M. perstans.

- Treatment for other parasitic worm infections, if needed.


Description:

Residents of malaria-endemic regions are frequently exposed to a variety of other parasites concurrently with malarial parasites. In Mali, lymphatic filariasis due to Wuchereria bancrofti co-exists in several regions highly endemic for malaria, and co-infection is common in the residents of these areas. Because of the chronicity of filarial infections and an associated bias towards the development of an adaptive immune response dominated by Th2 cytokines, a pre-existing filarial infection has the potential to alter the immune response towards incoming malarial parasites, clearance of which are considered to be dependent on a robust Th1 response. This could, in turn, affect the clinical manifestations and outcomes of malaria infection. Conversely, immune responses to filarial parasites may be modulated in the presence of malarial parasites. In addition to sharing a human host, Plasmodium falciparum and Wuchereria bancrofti are transmitted by the same mosquito vector, Anopheles gambiae, and interaction between the two species in the vector may have important implications for transmission of these two infections. The primary goals of this study are to determine the effect of concurrent infections with P. falciparum and W. bancrofti parasites on the prevalence and severity of malaria infection in children living in a Malian village co-endemic for two parasites and to assess the effects of co-infection on the immune responses to these two parasites over the course of the malaria transmission season. The epidemiology of co-infection at the human and vector level will also be examined.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 1039
Est. completion date January 31, 2012
Est. primary completion date
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 1 Year to 20 Years
Eligibility - INCLUSION CRITERIA (Screening):

Age 1 - 20 years

Male or non-pregnant female

Resident of Tien gu bougou or Bougoudiana

EXCLUSION CRITERIA (Screening):

History or clinical evidence of severe and/or chronic illness

History of allergy to artesunate, amodiaquine, albendazole, praziquantel or mebendazole

Plans to relocate outside the immediate vicinity of the village during the study period

INCLUSION CRITERIA (Matched prospective study):

Age 1 - 20 years

Male or non-pregnant female

Resident of Tien gu bougou or Bougoudiana

EXCLUSION CRITERIA (Matched prospective study):

History or clinical evidence of severe and/or chronic illness

History of allergy to artesunate, amodiaquine, albendazole, praziquantel or mebendazole

Plans to relocate outside the immediate vicinity of the village during the study period

Hemoglobin less than or equal to 8 g/dL

Symptoms of malaria with parasitemia greater than or equal to 100,000/microliters at enrollment

Recent history or clinical evidence of prostration, bleeding, respiratory distress, seizures, coma or obtundation, jaundice, inability to drink, persistent vomiting

INCLUSION CRITERIA: (Immunologic Extension Study)

Age > 10 years

Male or non-pregnant female (by history)

Resident of Tien gu bougou or Bougoudiana

Willingness to allow storage of specimens for future research

EXCLUSION CRITERIA: (Immunologic Extension Study)

History or clinical evidence of severe and/or chronic illness

Hemoglobin less than or equal to g/dL

Positive pregnancy test

Clinical malaria (symptoms of malaria plus any malaria parasites identified on thick smear)

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Locations

Country Name City State
Mali Faculty of Medicine, Pharmacy and Odonto-Stomatology (FMPOS) Bamako

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Mali, 

References & Publications (3)

Breman JG, Egan A, Keusch GT. The intolerable burden of malaria: a new look at the numbers. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2001 Jan-Feb;64(1-2 Suppl):iv-vii. — View Citation

Gupta S, Snow RW, Donnelly CA, Marsh K, Newbold C. Immunity to non-cerebral severe malaria is acquired after one or two infections. Nat Med. 1999 Mar;5(3):340-3. — View Citation

Marsh K, Kinyanjui S. Immune effector mechanisms in malaria. Parasite Immunol. 2006 Jan-Feb;28(1-2):51-60. Review. — View Citation

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