Malaria Clinical Trial
Official title:
In Vivo Efficacy of Artemether-lumefantrine and Amodiaquine-artesunate for the Treatment of Uncomplicated Falciparum Malaria in Children: A Multisite Open Label, Two-cohort Clinical Trial in Mozambique
This is a classical in vivo clinical trial, following World Health organization's recommendations, ran as a multisite study within Mozambique trying to assess the efficacy and safety in 4 sites of the two oral ACTS artemether-lumefantrine (AL) and Amodiaquine-Artesunate (AQ-AS), first line treatment for malaria in mozambique, for the treatment of uncomplicated malaria in children aged<5 years.
This study followed WHO recommendations for in vivo antimalarial efficacy trials.
The study population comprised children aged 6 to 59 months with microscopically confirmed
acute uncomplicated malaria. Other inclusion criteria included body weight ≥5kg, the presence
of fever (≥37.5°C axillary) or a history of fever in the preceding 24 hours, P. falciparum
malaria mono infection with an asexual blood density ≥2,000/µL and <200,000/µL, and the
absence of severe signs of complicated malaria as defined by WHO. Key exclusion criteria
included mixed malarial infections, haemoglobin <5g/dL, severe malnutrition, intake of
anti-malarials within the preceding seven days, ongoing prophylaxis in HIV positive patients
with cotrimoxazole or the intake of any other drug with anti-malarial activity, and any
serious underlying disease. Patients satisfying the inclusion criteria were enrolled if the
parent/guardian signed a detailed written informed consent.
Eligible patients were consecutively assigned to the cohort and treated with AL (cohort 1) or
AQ-AS (cohort 2). AL (Coartem™) was administered twice daily for three days (six doses in
total) with dosage determined according to body weight: one tablet (20mg artemether and 120mg
lumefantrine) for children 5 to <15kg, two tablets per dose for those 15 to <25kg, and three
tablets per dose for those 25 to <35kg. AQ-AS (Winthrop™) was administered once daily
according to body weight: one 25mg artesunate and 67.5mg amodiaquine tablet in children <9kg,
one 50mg artesunate and 135mg amodiaquine tablet in children 9-17.9kg; and one 100mg
artesunate and 270mg amodiaquine tablet in children >18-35kg. All treatments were directly
observed for a minimum of 30 minutes. Vomiting occurring within the first 30 minutes implied
the repetition of the full dose of treatment. For those patients living far away from the
health facilities, and for which direct observation of the evening doses of AL was
challenging, admission was offered for the first three days of the study.
Antipyretics, such as paracetamol, were used to control fever>=38ºC. In the event of severe
malaria or danger signs, the patient was hospitalized and received intravenous quinine,
according to the national malaria treatment policy. Rescue therapy according to national
malaria treatment guidelines was also administered in cases of early or late treatment
failure
Follow-up visits took place on days 1, 2, 3, 7, 14, and 28 after enrolment or at any time
point whenever the child was sick. Patients who prematurely discontinued either study drug or
the study were excluded from the study. Vital signs and body temperature were assessed during
each follow-up visit. Adverse events were recorded and assessed for severity and association
with study medication.
Thick and thin Giemsa-stained blood slides were prepared before each dose was administered
and at every follow-up visit of days 2, 3, 7, 14, 21 and 28. Slides were examined by two
independent microscopists and considered negative if no parasites were seen after examination
of 200 oil-immersion fields in a thick blood film. Species determination (and thus
conformation of monoinfection) was made based on assessment of thin films. Blood samples for
PCR analysis were collected from every patient at baseline and at days 7, 14 and 28, day of
treatment failure or at any other unscheduled visit. PCR was performed centrally for all
cases of recurrent parasitaemia from day 7 onwards to distinguish recrudescence from
reinfection according to the standardized WHO method. The Molecular markers associated with
suboptimal response to ACTs will be investigated.
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