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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01218893
Other study ID # ZonMw1
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received October 8, 2010
Last updated March 30, 2012
Start date April 2011
Est. completion date March 2012

Study information

Verified date March 2012
Source Radboud University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority Netherlands: The Central Committee on Research Involving Human Subjects (CCMO)
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Malaria is one of the major infectious diseases in the world with a tremendous impact on the quality of life significantly contributing to the ongoing poverty in endemic countries. It causes almost one million deaths per year, the majority of which are children under the age of five. The malaria parasite enters the human body through the skin, by the bite of an infected mosquito. Subsequently, it invades the liver and develops and multiplies inside the hepatocytes. After a week, the hepatocytes burst open and the parasites are released in the blood stream, causing the clinical phase of the disease.

As a unique opportunity to study malaria immunology and efficacy of immunisation strategies, a protocol has been developed in the past to conduct experimental human malaria infections (EHMIs). EHMIs generally involve small groups of malaria-naïve volunteers infected via the bites of P. falciparum infected laboratory-reared Anopheline mosquitoes. Although potentially serious or even lethal, P. falciparum malaria can be radically cured at the earliest stages of blood infection where risks of complications are virtually absent.

The investigators have shown previously that healthy human volunteers can be protected from a malaria mosquito (sporozoite) challenge by immunization with sporozoites (by mosquito bites) under chloroquine prophylaxis (CPS immunization). However, it is unknown how many mosquito bites are necessary to confer protection. Moreover, as all volunteers were protected in this study, no correlates of protection could be established. For future development of vaccines and understanding of protective immunity to malaria, it is important to investigate the lowest dose of CPS immunization that confers 100% protection and to find correlates of protection. Therefore, the present study aims to make the CPS immunization protocol more sensitive by lowering the number of infected mosquito bites, in order to study the underlying mechanisms of protection.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 30
Est. completion date March 2012
Est. primary completion date January 2012
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender Both
Age group 18 Years to 35 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Age > 18 and < 35 years healthy volunteers (males or females)

- Good health based on history and clinical examination

- Negative pregnancy test

- Use of adequate contraception for females

- All volunteers must sign the informed consent form demonstrating their understanding of the meaning and procedures of the study

- Volunteer agrees to inform the general practitioner and agrees to sign a request to release medical information concerning contra-indications for participation in the study

- Willingness to undergo a Pf mosquito challenge

- For volunteers not living in Leiden: agreement to stay in a hotel room close to the trial center during a part of the study (Day 5 after challenge till 3 days after treatment)

- Reachable (24/7) by mobile phone during the whole study period

- Living with a third party that could contact the clinicians in case of alteration of consciousness or agreement to stay in a hotel room close to the trial center during a part of the study (Day 5 after challenge till 3 days after treatment)

- Available to attend all study visits

- Agreement to refrain from blood donation to Sanquin or for other purposes, during the study period until 337.

- Willingness to undergo HIV, hepatitis B and hepatitis C tests

- Negative urine toxicology screening test at screening visit and day before challenge

- Willingness to take a prophylactic regime of chloroquine and curative regimen of Malarone®

Exclusion Criteria:

- History of malaria

- Plans to travel to malaria endemic areas during the study period

- Plans to travel outside of the Netherlands during the challenge period

- Previous participation in any malaria vaccine study and/or positive serology for Pf

- Symptoms, physical signs and laboratory values suggestive of systemic disorders including renal, hepatic, cardiovascular, pulmonary, skin, immunodeficiency, psychiatric, and other conditions which could interfere with the interpretation of the study results or compromise the health of the volunteers

- History of diabetes mellitus or cancer (except basal cell carcinoma of the skin)

- History of arrhythmias or prolonged QT-interval

- Positive family history in 1st and 2nd degree relatives for cardiac disease < 50 years old

- An estimated, ten year risk of fatal cardiovascular disease of =5%, as estimated by the Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation (SCORE) system

- Clinically significant abnormalities in electrocardiogram (ECG) at screening

- Body Mass Index (BMI) below 18 or above 30 kg/m2

- Any clinically significant deviation from the normal range in biochemistry or hematology blood tests or in urine analysis

- Positive HIV, HBV or HCV tests

- Participation in any other clinical study within 30 days prior to the onset of the study

- Enrollment in any other clinical study during the study period

- Pregnant or lactating women

- Volunteers unable to give written informed consent

- Volunteers unable to be closely followed for social, geographic or psychological reasons

- Previous history of drug or alcohol abuse interfering with normal social function during a period of one year prior to enrolment in the study

- A history of psychiatric disease

- Known hypersensitivity to Malarone® or chloroquine

- The use of chronic immunosuppressive drugs, antibiotics, or other immune modifying drugs within three months of study onset (inhaled and topical corticosteroids are allowed) and during the study period

- Contra-indications to Malarone® or chloroquine including treatment taken by the volunteer that interferes with Malarone® or chloroquine

- Any confirmed or suspected immunosuppressive or immunodeficient condition, including asplenia

- Co-workers of the departments of Medical Microbiology, Parasitology, or Internal Medicine of the Leiden University medical Centre

- A history of sickle cell anemia, sickle cell trait, thalassemia, thalassemia trait or G6PD deficiency

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Basic Science


Intervention

Drug:
Chloroquine prophylaxis
The chloroquine dose used will be 300mg for the first two days, followed by 300mg per week, for 13 weeks.
Biological:
Immunization
All groups will be immunised with mosquitobites. The number of infected mosquitoes differs per group, as clarified in group description.
Plasmodium falciparum challenge
Exposure to the bites of 5 Plasmodium falciparum infected mosquitoes.
Drug:
Malarone treatment
When thick smear positive, of ar day 21 after challenge, all volunteers will be treated with malarone.

Locations

Country Name City State
Netherlands Leiden University Medical Centre Leiden

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Radboud University

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Netherlands, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Period to thick smear positivity after challenge in groups 1, 2, 3 and 4 21 days after challenge (day 218 of study) No
Primary Parasitemia and kinetics of parasitemia as measured by PCR in groups 1, 2, 3 and 4 21 days after challenge (day 218 of study) No
Primary Frequency of signs or symptoms in groups 1, 2, 3 and 4 Day 21 after challenge (day 218 of study) No
Secondary Cellular immune response between groups 1, 2, 3 and 4 Day 0 - day 337 of study No
Secondary Antibody production between groups 1, 2, 3 and 4 Day 0 - day 337 of study No
Secondary Cytokine profile in groups 1, 2, 3 and 4 Day 0 - day 337 of study No
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