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Schistosomiasis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03910972 Active, not recruiting - Schistosomiasis Clinical Trials

Sm-TSP-2 Schistosomiasis Vaccine in Healthy Ugandan Adults

Start date: October 7, 2019
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The study will recruit up to 290 healthy adult males and non-pregnant females into a two-part clinical trial of a vaccine to protect against schistosomiasis caused by infection with S. mansoni. Two formulations of the Sm-TSP-2 vaccine will be tested: one using Alhydrogel® only, and one using Alhydrogel® plus AP 10-701, each at 3 different doses of antigen: 10mcg, 30mcg, and 100mcg. The first part of the study will be a Phase I dose-escalation safety and immunogenicity study followed by a Phase IIb trial in which a larger number of adults will be enrolled to assess the impact of the vaccine on infection with S. mansoni. The impact of the vaccine on infection with S. haematobium will also be assessed although this will be exploratory given that potential cross-protection against this species is only hypothetical at this point.

NCT ID: NCT03893097 Completed - Schistosoma Mansoni Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Artesunate-mefloquine as a Novel Alternative Treatment for Schistosomiasis in African Children

SchistoSAM
Start date: October 14, 2019
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The SchistoSAM study is an open label, two-arm, individually-randomized controlled trial with a non-inferiority design, conducted in northern Senegal. The study aims at determining if the efficacy of one and of repeated courses of artesunate-mefloquine (AM) is respectively similar to or higher than that of a standard praziquantel (PZQ) treatment. Secondly, the study will assess if novel DNA- and antigen-based diagnostics are more accurate than microscopy in assessing antischistosomal treatment response.

NCT ID: NCT03870204 Completed - Clinical trials for Aged =2 Years in Schistosomiasis Affected Areas

Validation of POC-CCA Rapid Urine Test for Qualitative Detection of Schistosoma Japonicum

SchisCCA
Start date: September 4, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a longitudinal cohort study that will be coordinated with the 2019 schistosomiasis stool survey in Napu. The study will use the stool survey results as entry criteria to identify subjects to become the index cases. Contact investigation will be conducted to the index cases during home visit (Visit 1). The index cases and their contacts meeting the study's eligibility criteria will be recruited. For Visit 1, they will be tested for schistosomiasis by on the spot POC-CCA, stool samples will be tested for KK at Donggala R&D Center Laboratory and urinary tract infection (UTI) by urine dipsticks, stool samples will be tested for schistosomiasis and soil transmitted helminths (STH) by KK at Donggala R&D Center Laboratory and by molecular assay (Taqman qPCR) at the INA-RESPOND Reference Laboratory, while dried blood spots samples will be tested for schistosome antibodies by ELISA at the INA-RESPOND Reference Laboratory. The study KK and/or POC-CCA will be used to determine their schistosomiasis status. Those with positive schistosomiasis status by KK and/or POC-CCA will continue follow up to Visit 2 and 3.

NCT ID: NCT03845140 Completed - Schistosomiasis Clinical Trials

L-PZQ ODT in Schistosoma Infected Children

Start date: September 2, 2019
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The study would evaluate the safety and efficacy of L-praziquantel orodispersible (L-PZQ ODT) tablets in Schistosoma infected children aged 3 months to 6 years.

NCT ID: NCT03799510 Completed - Schistosomiasis Clinical Trials

Anti-Schistosomiasis Vaccine: Sm14 Phase 2b-Sn in School Children

Start date: December 13, 2018
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The clinical trial phase 2b is designed to assess the safety and the specific immune response of the active ingredient (protein + adjuvant) in healthy and then in infected school children from 8 to 11 years of age with intestinal and/or urinary schistosomiasis, living in the Valley of the Senegal River, a highly endemic area for schistosomiasis.

NCT ID: NCT03779347 Recruiting - Pregnancy Clinical Trials

Schistosomiasis Diagnosis Using a CAA Antigen Test

FreebiLyGAB
Start date: May 1, 2019
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Schistosomiasis is one of most important human parasitic diseases worldwide. Pregnant women and their infants are two vulnerable population groups, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, where - amongst other infectious agents - they are heavily exposed to infections with S. haematobium. Adoption of the recommendation and implementation by national disease control programs was however delayed in most African countries, due to the lack of safety data in humans and in the unborn babies. First results from randomized controlled trials with PZQ in pregnant women meanwhile have provided evidence for the safety of PZQ also in newborns. In Gabon, S. haematobium is the primarily prevalent Schistosoma species infection. As it is true for most of observational and interventional studies on schistosomiasis, the power of the study is weakened due to the low sensitivity of reference schistosomiasis diagnosis applied, and one might correctly assume that a considerable proportion of samples were misclassified as negative in the control groups. Therefore, diagnostic tests that are highly sensitive and specific are essential to the detection of Schistosoma infections and are urgently needed for a test-and-treat strategy to control schistosomiasis in pregnancy as well as tools to determine efficacy of new interventions tested in clinical trials. Circulating anodic antigen (CAA) and circulating cathodic antigen (CCA) have levels correlating with the number of worms and have also been shown to clear within a few days or weeks after successful treatment. Assays measuring serum levels of these antigens (POC-CCA, UCP-LF CAA) are therefore deemed to assess drug efficacy. Based on above mentioned tools, we decided to assess the accuracy of CAA measurement to determine the Schistosoma infection in two specific conditions: A) as a diagnostic tool for S. haematobium to prepare for the future implementation of a PZQ test-and-treat strategy and B) as a diagnostic tool to measure efficacy of praziquantel in schistosomiasis and pregnancy intervention trials.

NCT ID: NCT03640377 Recruiting - Schistosomiasis Clinical Trials

Praziquantel in Children Under Age 4

PIPS
Start date: February 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The overall goals of this proposal are to conduct a trial to address the significant gaps with respect to our understanding of best approaches to treatment of children ages 1-4 with intestinal schistosomiasis. Over 200 million individuals worldwide are infected with one of three predominant species of schistosomes, with over half of infections occurring in children. Recent studies have highlighted the fact that many children experience first infections before the age of two, with the prevalence of infection among children under four mirroring the prevalence of older children from the same community. Importantly, praziquantel (PZQ), the drug used worldwide for the treatment of schistosomiasis, is only FDA approved among adults and children over the age of four. Only one small study led by co-PI Bustinduy has evaluated the pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamics (PK/PD) of PZQ in children. That study, conducted among children ages 3-8, strongly suggests that the current dose of 40 mg/kg is insufficient, with lower cure rates than found at 60 mg/kg. In endemic settings, PZQ is most often administered as part of school based, or community wide preventive chemotherapy campaigns. Currently, none of the 28 schistosomiasis endemic African nations or The Philippines includes children under the age of four in control programs. The reasons for this are multifactorial and include a) lack of sufficient PK/PD data in this age group, with none in children under three, b) lack of safety data at a dose of 80 mg/kg, c) lack of data addressing the impact of treatment on key growth and nutritional outcomes in this vulnerable age group hampering prioritization of treatment, d) no PK/PD studies conducted in the context of pediatric S. japonicum and e) FDA labeling that does not include young children. The goals of this proposal are to conduct a randomized, controlled Phase II trial to be conducted in an S. mansoni endemic region of Uganda and an S. japonicum endemic region of The Philippines with N=600 children ages 1-4, that will address many of the current gaps that are hindering treatment of young children. Specifically in SA1 we will 1) assess PK/PD of PZQ dosing among children under the age of 4 at doses of 40 versus 80 mg/kg, 2) expand PD endpoints to include state of the art antigen tests and morbidity outcomes, 3) assess the PK/PD of both PZQ enantiomers, and 4) address the innovative hypothesis that environmental enteropathy (EE) contributes to the significant inter-individual variability observed in PZQ PK/PD. In SA2, we will 1) assess the safety of PZQ administered at 80 mg/kg in two large cohorts of very young children, 2) assess the impact of two different treatment intervals (6 vs 12 months) on nutritional status, growth, and anemia risk, and 3) address innovative hypotheses regarding mechanisms through which schistosomiasis contributes to morbidity in this age group including EE and gut microbial translocation with consequent systemic immune activation.

NCT ID: NCT03458338 Completed - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Prevalence of Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) and Risk Factors in Sub-Saharan Africa

RenalOne
Start date: December 8, 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Prospective cross-sectional study at the outpatient clinic (OPC) of the Bagamoyo District Hospital (BDH) in Tanzania. Assessment of basic epidemiological data (Point prevalence and risk factors) on CKD with simple clinical, laboratory tests and the patients history. After informed consent blood samples are taken for complete blood count, serum creatinine, HbA1c, HIV-Screening, and urine samples for dipstick, urine sediment, and albumin-creatinine ratio. Further, office blood pressure, weight and height are taken. Further, patients history are asked by a questionnaire (i.e.history of infectious and cardiovascular diseases and basic demographic data: i.e. sex, age). CKD is defined as the presence of either impaired kidney function and/or albuminuria based on a one-time measurement. Primary outcome of the study are prevalence rates of CKD and the impact of non-communicable and communicable disorders on CKD.

NCT ID: NCT03187366 Active, not recruiting - Schistosomiasis Clinical Trials

Schistosomiasis in Senegal

Start date: January 2, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Schistosomiasis is a flatworm transmitted from freshwater snails to humans in the tropics. In addition to this infectious disease, tropical developing countries are faced with malnutrition. We propose to alter pesticide and compost use to reduce schistosomiasis and maintain or even improve crop production.

NCT ID: NCT03158298 Terminated - Schistosomiasis Clinical Trials

Seropositivity and Adverse Birth Events in Migrants From Bilharzia-endemic Areas

Bilharzia
Start date: June 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The study intends to examine the association between schistosomiasis seropositivity and adverse pregnancy outcomes. It aims at the verification of the hypothesis that in pregnant women originating from endemic areas for schistosomiasis, positive serology is associated with reduced Infant birth weight.