Malaria Clinical Trial
Official title:
Cost-effectiveness Evaluation of Vector Control Strategies in Mozambique
This study aims to provide National Malaria Control Programs (NMCP), international donors and
other key stakeholders with clear evidence on the impact and cost-effectiveness of using
indoor residual spraying (IRS) with a non-pyrethroid insecticide in a high malaria
transmission area that has universal long-lasting insecticidal net (LLIN) coverage. This is
an interventional study with IRS serving as the research intervention.
The district of Mopeia, in the province of Zambezia, Mozambique will be the study site. This
is a high transmission area with a malaria parasite prevalence of 54% in children. The
Ministry of Health distributed LLINs in Mopeia in 2014-2015.
The NMCP through funding from President's Malaria Initiative Africa Indoor Residual Spraying
Project (PMI-AIRS) was able to cover half a district with indoor residual spraying. A
simplified census took place in mid-2016 to determine the number of children five years of
age and under in the district and enumerate and map the households to assist in
implementation.
From the 115 villages/bairros existent in Mopeia, 86 clusters were randomized in a government
randomization ceremony to either receive IRS with Actellic or maintain no IRS. The IRS was
implemented through a partnership between the NMCP and PMI-AIRS according to standard
operational and consent procedures. From each cluster, a cohort of 18 children five years of
age and under will be followed monthly to assess malaria incidence at the community level in
both IRS and non-IRS villages. There will be 774 children in the IRS villages and 774
children in the no-IRS villages (total cohort will be 1548). Additionally, the routine health
centre reporting system will be strengthened to assess malaria incidence in children five
years of age and under by passive case detection. Three cross sectional studies in April
2017, April 2018, and April 2019 will assess changes in net use, health seeking behaviour and
malaria prevalence at the community level.
Entomological data will be collected from both IRS and non-IRS areas to assess the vector
dynamics and insecticide resistance pattern of the local vector populations from sprayed and
unsprayed areas. Data on the costs of the implementation as well as health-related
expenditures at health system and household levels will be collected prospectively throughout
the study. These costs will be determined using both health system and societal perspectives.
The incidence rate in IRS and no-IRS areas will be combined with the micro-costing data to
calculate the cost per case averted at community and health facility level.
These findings will be disseminated to the NMCP and international donors and stakeholders to
complement the World Health Organization (WHO) guidance on combining indoor residual spraying
and long-lasting insecticidal nets.
Mopeia is a district in the Zambezia Province. Mopeia borders the district of Morrumbala to
the North, the district of Chinde and the province of Sofala to the South, the districts of
Nicoadala and Inhassunge in the East and the Provinces of Sofala and Tete in the West. It has
an area of 7671 km2. The projected population for 2016 is 162.188 individuals with 31.927
(19.7%) under five years of age (National Institute of Statistics, Mozambique). There are
three administrative posts, eleven localities and 224 villages (Bairros) and approximately
34.603 households. There are 12 health facilities (PMI-AIRS Mozambique, unpublished data).
There is little socio-economic data available from Mopeia.
The malaria burden is high in Zambezia with a parasite prevalence of 54% in under-fives [19].
The parasite prevalence in children 1-15 years of age in Mopeia is 47.8% (38.7%-57.1%) [20].
The mean rapid diagnostic test (RDT) positivity rate during a recent enhanced surveillance
exercise at health facilities was 62.8% (range 50-72%) [21]. The same data suggest high
incidence at health facilities, showing 470 cases per 1000 children during the same period
(June-Nov 2014). Mopeia recently received 175.297 LLINs in 2013 and IRS with pyrethroids in
2014 [22]. Residents of Mopeia will receive new LLINs in early 2017.
Data from February 2015 in the neighbouring districts of Mocuba and Morrumbala show
Pyrethroid resistance in the local Anopheles gambiae s.l. population [23]. Further north, in
the district of Milange, tested Anopheles gambiae s.l. remain susceptible to pyrethroids
[23]. See table 2 below for further details. Mopeia has been selected to receive IRS because
of its high malaria transmission intensity, the presence of LLINs in the district, and the
aforementioned regional indications of reduced pyrethroid susceptibility in the target vector
population, and the existence of IRS infrastructure and capacity from previous campaigns.
The villages selected for spraying will receive IRS with Actellic according to standard
operating and consent procedures [24] in addition to existing LLINs. Non IRS areas will have
existing LLINs, but will not receive IRS. In late 2017 (year two), IRS will be repeated using
the same village selection and insecticide. Additionally in 2017, the whole district will be
subject to universal LLIN distribution.
Individuals enrolled in the cohort were recruited independent of their household acceptance
or refusal of spray. IRS status will be confirmed with questionnaires during the monthly
active cohort visits and during the cross-sectional surveys, including questions about wall
replastering/painting and net usage (SSPs COST 001, 002 and 003). Additional information will
be obtained through cone bioassays.
The standard of malaria care at community and health center will remain unchanged throughout
the study and stock levels of malaria commodities will be ensured.
This study of IRS implementation in Mozambique will provide detailed information of the
impact and cost-effectiveness of adding IRS with an extended release formulation of the
organophosphate insecticide pirimiphos-methyl (Actellic®300CS) in a high transmission area
with high LLIN coverage. This information will be disseminated to the NMCP as well as to
local and international stakeholders and decision makers to inform policy recommendations and
choices regarding the combination of vector control strategies.
A simplified census was conducted in June-July 2016 to obtain the total number of children
five years of age and under per household and village. A randomization ceremony for the
intervention took place to randomly assign the villages to receive IRS or maintain their
current status. Participants in both IRS and non-IRS areas were randomly chosen and consented
to participate in cohorts to be followed prospectively. The total population disaggregated in
under five years of age and above five in each village in the district will be used as a
denominator for the passive case detection component of the study. Each house was
geopositioned during the census visit as part of the household enumeration for spraying. This
information can assist in defining the cluster size, core and buffer areas. Each household
will receive a unique permanent ID. This is an interventional study with IRS serving as the
research intervention.
To determine the incidence by active case detection, a cohort of children five years of age
and under will be followed monthly from the core zone of each cluster. During each visit the
care taker will answer a short questionnaire regarding health, net usage and health-related
expenditure. The temperature of each recruited child will be recorded and an RDT performed.
If the child has a positive RDT, irrespective of accompanying clinical symptoms he/she will
receive treatment according to the national guidelines.
At health facility level, a separate facility-based team will ensure the collection of the
household location (village) of each malaria case to determine the incidence in the different
study clusters by passive case detection. Joint work with the community health workers
(Agentes Polivantes Elementares [APEs]) will also strengthen quality of their data and they
will be asked to include information on the location (village) of each malaria case they
diagnose/treat.
Costing data will be prospectively collected using standardized data collection tools to
determine the cost of interventions (IRS and LLIN distribution) and of care-seeking.
Cross-sectional studies will be carried out at the peak of transmission season in 2017, 2018,
and 2019. There is a potential for the monthly visits for active case detection to have an
influence on household behavior and expenditure. Additional data on house expenditure will be
collected during the cross-sectionals to assess societal costs of malaria care that is
independent from study visits.
Entomological data including mosquito densities, sporozoite rates, resistance status and
indoor/outdoor biting ratios will be sampled from IRS and non-IRS villages throughout the
study following standard PMI procedures.
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