Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this project is to develop a community scabies eradication and education program for the highly endemic areas surrounding the Veron community on the eastern tip of the Dominican Republic. It proposes the use of oral Ivermectin as a replacement for topical Lindane--a readily available medical formulation, pesticide, and environmental toxin that is reported to be banned in the Dominican Republic as well as over 80 other countries throughout the world.


Clinical Trial Description

Introduction

The Secretaría de Estado de Salud Pública y Asistencia Social public health clinic in Veron, Dominican Republic continually reports a subjectively high prevalence and incidence of scabies infections among its general patient population without any means of direct measurement, proper intervention, or control, raising concerns that long-term infestation may lead to multiple other secondary medical and environmental problems.

The purpose of this project is to develop a community scabies eradication and education program for the highly endemic areas surrounding the Veron community. It proposes the use of oral Ivermectin as a replacement for topical Lindane, a readily available and prescribed pesticide and environmental toxin that is reportedly banned for all uses in the Dominican Republic as well as over 80 other countries throughout the world (Boffa, Brough, & Ead, 1995; Davies, Dedhia, Mergade, Banquet, & Maibach, 1983).

Ivermectin, on the other hand, is a remarkably safe, effective, cost-comparative oral medication with a substantially broader scope of coverage, duration of effectiveness, and ease of delivery and compliance when compared to Lindane, as well as over 20 years of use in global mass eradication campaigns for other parasites on the order of more than 50 million doses to date (Alexander, Bockarie, Kastens, Kazra, & Alpers, 1998; del Guidice, Chosidow, & Caumes, 2003; Madan, Jaskiran, Gupta, & Gupta, 2001).

Specific program goals include: the quantification of community disease prevalence, a statistically significant reduction in both scabies incidence as well as secondary disease sequelae, improved community scabies awareness and prevention abilities, and decreased environmental impact on the Veron area by eliminating the use of Lindane for scabies treatment.

The research is designed to employ a door-to-door survey and treatment campaign in a typical Veron neighborhood aimed at evaluating and treating every member in this target population to create a mass prophylaxis that breaks the parasite-host cycle. Another round of treatment will occur 6 months later, per pharmacologic dosage interval recommendations (del Guidice et al., 2003).

Individual and group scabies education programs will occur at the Veron clinic, as well as at the local schools to target the highly susceptible youth populations throughout the Veron area.

Incidence measurements will occur on a monthly basis for one year after program start, coinciding with two 6-month treatment intervals. At the end of one year, final scabies prevalence and incidence data will be evaluated for statistical significance. While mass treatments will cease at this time, oral Ivermectin will become the standard of care for ectoparasite coverage at the Veron clinic assuming a statistically significant reduction in scabies prevalence is achieved.

To date, no mass scabies eradication programs using oral Ivermectin have been reported in the Caribbean, despite it remarkable success in other countries against scabies as well as other parasites, namely onchocerciasis and filariasis (Walker & Johnstone, 2000; Walton & Holt, 2004). This project has the potential to be an important contribution to the effort to eradicate a source of significant morbidity for both the people of Veron and the global community as a whole.

Methodology

The Veron Scabies Eradication and Education Program will obtain all its priority population data via door-to-door interviews within the Barrio Nuevo neighborhood.

A survey team of medical personnel will walk door-to-door program in an attempt to survey and treat every inhabitant of Barrio Nuevo, unless there is refusal or absolute contraindications. Subjects will first be informed of the program and its intent, asked to sign a letter of patient confidentiality, and assigned a number identifier for tracking purposes.

After consent is obtained, a survey will be administered to collect basic demographic information, scabies knowledge indicators, as well as pertinent past and current medical history related to scabies infection and contraindications to treatment with Ivermectin.

The subject will then be asked to undergo a brief skin exam that assesses scabies infectivity and results recorded using the following criteria: the presence of erythematous popular, vesicular, pustular, or bullous lesions associated with itching. Information will be recorded and used to guide treatment protocol.

After the skin exam, subjects will be instructed on scabies medical treatment and prevention, given a patient information and education pamphlet, asked if they have any specific questions or concerns, informed of ongoing community scabies education workshops at the clinic, and instructed to return to the clinic in 2 weeks if they have an active scabies infection. Otherwise, they will be informed that the researchers will return to their neighborhood each month to collect more information and in 6 months to administer another treatment.

Finally, the subject will be given 200μg/kg oral Ivermectin dosed by height if they are male or non-pregnant/non-lactating female, 5 years of age or older, and taller than 90 cm.

If the subject is a female and of childbearing age (still menstruating on a monthly basis), not currently menstruating, not able to show proof of using oral contraceptives (birth control pills) or injectable contraceptives (scheduled Depo Provera), not surgically sterile (hysterectomy or tubal ligation) they will be asked to undergo a rapid urine pregnancy test. If the test is negative they will be given 200μg/kg oral Ivermectin dosed by height.

If the subject is knowingly pregnant or lactating, the rapid pregnancy test is positive, or a child under 5 years and shorter than 90 cm they will be instructed on how to properly use Permethrin 5% lotion and given a 60gm bottle.

This protocol will be followed until every household is visited and treated within Barrio Nuevo at time = 0 and again at time = 6 months.

Investigators will conduct monthly scabies incidence surveys via door-to-door skin checks within Barrio Nuevo looking for current scabies symptomatology and recording results on the form described above.

At the end of one year, final scabies prevalence and incidence data will be evaluated for statistical significance. While mass treatments will cease at this time, oral Ivermectin will become the standard of care for ectoparasite coverage at the Veron clinic assuming a statistically significant reduction in scabies prevalence is achieved. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00604084
Study type Interventional
Source Edward Via Virginia College of Osteopathic Medicine
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date May 2007
Completion date May 2008

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT02572986 - A Study to Evaluate the Therapeutic Equivalence of Generic Permethrin Cream 5% to Elimite® in the Treatment of Scabies Phase 3
Completed NCT00884728 - Evaluation of a Regional Healthy Skin Program in Remote Aboriginal Communities of Australia's Northern Territory N/A
Completed NCT05025696 - Efficacy and Side Effects of Blacksoap® as Adjuvant Therapy of Scabies N/A
Completed NCT04205669 - Comparing the Effectiveness of Individual vs. Household Treatment for Scabies in Lambaréné, Gabon Phase 4
Completed NCT02254564 - PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) Assay for Diagnosis of Sarcoptes Scabiei
Not yet recruiting NCT06404333 - Evaluating Pediatric Ivermectin in Children Under 15 kg (EPIC-15) Phase 2
Completed NCT03676140 - Safety of Co-administration of IDA and Azithromycin for NTDs ( ComboNTDs ) Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05875441 - Efficacy and Safety Study of Moxidectin in Adults With Scabies Phase 2
Completed NCT02978508 - Bio-equivalence Study Comparing Permethrin Cream, 5% With Elimite in Patients With Active Scabies. Phase 3
Recruiting NCT04332068 - Ivermectin Safety in Small Children Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04844905 - Adjunctive Ivermectin Mass Drug Administration for Malaria Control Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT06380452 - Therapy for Scabies With Two Differently Concentrated Permethrin Creams Phase 3
Completed NCT02485717 - Phase 3 Trial to Assess the Safety and Efficacy of Natroba for the Treatment of Scabies Phase 3
Completed NCT02485704 - Phase 3 Trial to Assess the Safety and Efficacy of Natroba for the Treatment of Scabies Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05310734 - PK and Safety Study of Natroba Topical Suspension 0.9% in Subjects 1 Month to 3 Years 11 Months of Age With Scabies Phase 4
Recruiting NCT04931680 - Risk Factors for Treatment Failure of Scabies in Autochthonous Populations of French Guiana (GUYAGALE)
Completed NCT06396507 - Sulfur vs. Different Regimes of Permethrin for Scabies Phase 3
Completed NCT05862701 - Comparison of Topical 5% Permethrin and Topical 10% Sulfur in the Treatment of Scabies Phase 1
Not yet recruiting NCT05500326 - Ivermectin Therapy for Scabies Infection in Children Younger Than 5 Years of Age (ITCHY Study) Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04814511 - Escalated Therapy of Scabies With INFECTOSCAB 5% (Permethrin) Phase 3