Malaria Clinical Trial
Official title:
Reducing the Burden of Malaria in HIV-Infected Pregnant Women and Their HIV-Exposed Children (PROMOTE Birth Cohort 2)
This is a double-blinded, randomized controlled trial of 200 HIV-infected pregnant women living in Tororo, Uganda, an area of high malaria transmission. HIV-infected pregnant women between 12 and 28 weeks gestation will be randomized to receive enhanced malaria chemoprevention with monthly dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DP) versus monthly DP placebo. Their HIV-exposed children will receive the same prevention regimen from 2 to 24 months of age to which the mothers were randomized. All women will receive daily trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TS) throughout the study per Uganda Ministry of Health guidelines. Children will also receive daily TS from 6 weeks to 24 months of age. TS will be considered a study drug only in infants and children beginning 6 weeks after cessation of breastfeeding and upon exclusion of HIV infection. Women and their children will be followed for 36 months after delivery. In a subset of the study population, the investigators will conduct an intensive pharmacokinetic study that will evaluate pharmacokinetic exposure of DP and EFV. The investigators will also measure HIV-related outcomes among the women enrolled in the study. The investigators will test the hypothesis that for HIV-infected mothers and HIV-exposed infants, that enhanced versus standard malaria chemoprevention in HIV-infected pregnant women and their children will reduce the incidence of malaria among children from 0 to 24 months of age and improve the development of naturally acquired antimalarial immunity.
Pregnant women will be scheduled to be seen in the study clinic every 4 weeks during their
pregnancy. Women will be seen at 1 week, 6 weeks, and 3 months postpartum and every 3 months
thereafter. In addition, pregnant women will be instructed to come to the study clinic for
all their medical care and avoid the use of any outside medications. Women will be provided
all routine HIV care at the clinic according to Uganda MOH guidelines. All women will have
ARVs and TS dispensed at the study clinic. Counseling on breastfeeding and infant feeding
will be provided per Uganda MOH guidelines. HIV care and breastfeeding and infant feeding
recommendations may be changed to reflect the most recent standard of care per MOH
guidelines. Children will be scheduled to be seen in the clinic every 4 weeks and parents
/guardians of children will be instructed to bring their child to the study clinic for all
medical care and avoid the use of any outside medications. The study clinic will remain open
7 days a week from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Each time a study participant is seen in the clinic a standardized history and physical exam
will be performed. Patients who are febrile (tympanic temperature > 3 8.0˚C) or report
history of fever in the past 24 hours will have blood obtained by finger prick for a thick
blood smear. If the thick blood smear is positive, the patient will be diagnosed with
malaria. If the thick blood smear is negative, the patient will be managed by study
physicians for a non-malarial febrile illness. If the patient is afebrile and does not report
a recent fever, a thick blood smear will not be obtained, except when following routine
testing schedules.
Routine assessments will be done in the clinic every 4 weeks for both pregnant women and
children. Pregnant women and children will receive standards of care as designated in the
Uganda MOH guidelines. Children will have care for HIV-exposed children according to MOH
guidelines, with the exception that TS will be continued until 2 years of life. Routine care
in children will use Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) guidelines. During
routine assessments subjects will be asked about visits to outside health facilities and the
use of any medications outside the study protocol. Standardized assessment of adherence will
also be done for study drugs administered at home and Insecticide Treated Net use. A routine
history and physical exam will be performed using a standardized clinical assessment form.
Blood will be collected by finger prick for thick smear, collection of plasma for PK studies,
and filter paper samples. Phlebotomy for routine laboratory tests (CBC and ALT) to monitor
for potential adverse events from study medications and for immunology studies will be
performed every 8 weeks in pregnant women. Non malaria screening will also include stool ova
and parasite examination, circulating filarial antigens (by ICT card for Wucheria), and blood
smear for microfilaremia (including Mansonella perstans) using Knott's technique. For
pregnant women, study drugs will be administered at the time of each routine visit.
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