Anemia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Intermittent Preventive Treatment (IPTi) for the Prevention of Malaria and Anaemia in PNG Infants
In malaria-endemic areas, young children have an especially high risk of malaria morbidity
and mortality. Malaria is estimated to cause up to 2 million deaths and 500 million clinical
episodes in Africa alone. The bulk of disease in Africa and severe disease and deaths
globally is due to P. falciparum. However, P. vivax is also responsible for a substantial
disease burden in endemic regions outside Africa, where P. vivax may account for more than
half of all malaria cases. Efforts to reduce this unacceptably high disease burden are
hampered by the limited availability of affordable interventions. Following the cessation of
large-scale vector control in highly endemic areas, malaria control efforts have centred on
early diagnosis and treatment of clinical cases and reducing exposure through the use of
insecticide-treated nets (ITNs). While ITNs have been shown to significantly reduce the
burden of malaria additional effective interventions are urgently needed.
Several trials have shown that chemoprophylaxis given to children at weekly or fortnightly
intervals reduces morbidity from malaria in a number of different settings and populations.
An alternative approach has been to use intermittent preventive therapy (IPT) involving the
administration of a full therapeutic dose of antimalarials at regular intervals. This is
logistically easier to deliver, and is less costly, and may reduce problems of promoting
drug resistance associated with regular chemoprophylaxis. Intermittent administration of
sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) during antenatal clinic visits was shown to be highly
effective in reducing malaria and anaemia in pregnant women and improving infant birth
weights. IPT in pregnancy (IPTp) is now recommended by WHO for endemic regions of Africa.
Intermittent preventive treatment in infancy (IPTi) is one of the most promising recent
interventions to reduce the devastating impact of malaria in early childhood. Although two
African studies have provided the proof of principle, further studies are needed to address
several key issues. IPTi needs additional evaluation in a variety of settings and
populations, alternative drugs and treatment schedules need to be tested and the long-term
effect of IPTi on risk of malaria illness through early childhood needs to be clarified.
Many of these issues are currently being addressed in a series of studies conducted under
the auspice of the IPTi Consortium. However, all these studies are based in sub-Saharan
Africa and are thus almost exclusively concerned with the potential of IPTi to prevent P.
falciparum malaria.
In order to determine whether IPTi is also an effective intervention in areas where there is
a high prevalence of non-falciparum infections, further studies outside Africa are urgently
needed. In addition, although initial IPTi studies have not shown a rebound in malaria
morbidity following the intervention, the influence of IPTi on the acquisition of functional
malaria immunity needs further investigation.
This proposal brings together investigators, experience, and resources to conduct a clinical
trial of IPTi complemented by careful epidemiologic and laboratory investigations in two
highly endemic areas of Papua New Guinea, where infections with all 4 human Plasmodium
species are common. The studies will be based at the PNG Institute for Medical Research,
which has excellent infrastructure and a strong history of malaria research and
community-based studies
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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