Plasmodium Falciparum Malaria Clinical Trial
Official title:
Targeted Chemo-elimination (TCE) to Eradicate Malaria in Areas of Suspected or Proven Artemisinin Resistance in Southeast Asia and South Asia
The overall aim of this study is two fold:
1. to pilot targeted chemo-elimination of plasmodium falciparum malaria in known areas of
artemisinin resistance in South East Asia.
2. to understand the micro-epidemiology of malaria in these areas; chiefly, the prevalence
and importance to on-going transmission of sub-clinical p.f malaria infections.
The spread of artemisinin resistance in Plasmodium falciparum, which compromises the
therapeutic efficacy of artemisinin combination treatments (ACTs), is the greatest threat to
current global initiatives to control and eliminate malaria and is considered the highest
priority of the WHO Global Malaria Programme. If not eliminated, resistant parasites could
spread across Asia to Africa, as happened with resistance to other antimalarials in the past.
Conventional descriptions of the epidemiology of malaria in low transmission settings suggest
that malaria prevalences are low (<10%) and heterogeneous. Most or all infections are thought
to be symptomatic so the focus of malaria control activities is on the identification and
treatment of symptomatic individuals. We and others have shown recently that artemisinin
resistant P. falciparum is prevalent in Western Cambodia, and that it is now also found along
the Thailand-Myanmar border and Vietnam. We have recently developed highly sensitive
quantitative PCR (uPCR) methods for parasite detection using >1mL of blood which are 5,000
times more sensitive than conventional microscopy, and 100 times more sensitive than
currently used PCR.
We have studied villages along the Thai-Myanmar border which are typical for the region and
are classified by conventional epidemiological techniques as low-transmission (5-20% malaria
prevalence). Our studies suggest that the majority of the population is infected. In Pailin,
Western Cambodia, in areas where the National Malaria Control Programme and WHO believe that
malaria has been all but eliminated, we have also found very high rates (>80%) of
sub-microscopic parasitaemia in patients with fever or history of fever who are RDT negative.
Thus, there is a lot more asymptomatic malaria in low transmission settings than previously
thought, suggesting that control and elimination activities need to be rethought.
Highly sensitive quantitative PCR (uPCR) requires a venous blood sample, a laboratory which
can perform vacuum DNA extraction, and on average four weeks for processing. A rapid highly
sensitive diagnostic test which can be performed at the point of care would be a
technological breakthrough. Screening with highly sensitive RDTs and treating of asymptomatic
carriers will have a range of public health applications. Such tests are becoming available
in 2017 and will be evaluated side by side with uPCR.
This study is designed to conduct and evaluate the efficacy of pilot implementation of
targeted chemo-elimination in selected areas with the goal of eliminating malaria in these
regions. This differs from mass drug administration (MDA); it is a strategy used to identify
specific areas where mass treatment is necessary, in this case to eliminate all malaria
parasites. Elimination will be targeted at communities with significant levels of subclinical
infection and transmission which will be identifiable in the future by comparing rates of
positivity by RDT or microscopy from new population samples against our qPCR data, which
shows the true falciparum prevalence.
The study will assess the feasibility, safety and acceptability of this strategy and its
impact on the transmission of malaria and the progression of artemisinin resistance. In
addition it will evaluate the contribution of low parasitaemia carriage to transmission of
artemisinin resistant malaria. These pilot studies are a necessary prelude to future scale up
and policy implementation.
Dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DP) is a highly efficacious and inexpensive ACT which is well
tolerated by all age groups when used to treat uncomplicated multi-drug resistant falciparum
malaria in South East Asia. Monthly DP treatments have proved highly effective and well
tolerated. When used as part of a MDA strategy, the addition of a gametocytocidal drug
contributes towards the goal of malaria elimination by adding a strong transmission blocking
activity to the regimen. Primaquine (PQ), the only currently licensed 8-aminoquinoline, is
relatively safe and very effective when used at a dose of 0.25 mg base/kg, and does not
require G6PD screening. Thus, we propose to evaluate the potential of this strategy to
eliminatie malaria focally in areas where artemisinin resistance in P. falciparum is
prevalent using DP plus PQ.
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