Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03806465
Other study ID # RTSS MVPE
Secondary ID
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase
First received
Last updated
Start date February 25, 2019
Est. completion date December 2023

Study information

Verified date August 2021
Source World Health Organization
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

The RTS,S/AS01 malaria vaccine is being introduced sub-nationally in phased pilot introductions through the EPI programmes in Malawi Ghana and Kenya. Vaccine introduction is by the respective MoH in selected areas randomly assigned to receive the vaccine at the beginning of the pilots. In the context of this programmatic activity, the Malaria Vaccine Pilot Evaluation (MVPE) registered here as observational evaluations during early vaccine introduction, include a series of 3 household surveys, and sentinel hospital and community mortality surveillance, building on routine systems. These observational evaluations will measure: 1. The programmatic feasibility of delivering a 4 dose schedule; 2. Safety in routine use, with focus on cerebral malaria and meningitis; 3. The impact of the malaria vaccine in routine use on severe malaria and all-cause mortality


Description:

An evaluation of the pilot implementation of RTS,S/AS01 through routine health systems in moderate to high malaria transmission settings in Ghana, Kenya and Malawi. In the context of the new vaccine introduction, the Ministries of Health in the three countries will introduce the malaria vaccine (RTS,S/AS01) in a phased fashion (with some areas introducing the malaria vaccine first and the latter half, after the evaluation period) building on the national immunization programmes which routinely deliver vaccines and expanding the schedule of their routine EPI contacts. The evaluation of the pilot implementation will run for a total of about 46 months in each country. This will focus on the three main primary objectives of feasibility, safety and impact. The pilot implementation assumes that a total of 46-60 clusters will be identified per country, evenly split between implementation and comparison areas, with each cluster contributing approximately 4,000 children per year to the evaluation of RTS,S/AS01. Hence a total of approximately 120,000 children will receive the RTS,S vaccine in each country in each year. Evaluation data will be collected in the following ways. COMMUNITY BASED MORTALITY SURVEILLANCE Community based mortality surveillance will be established across the pilot evaluation areas to enable the evaluation of the impact of the malaria vaccine on all-cause mortality. This will use a network of Village Reporters (VR) to document all deaths among children aged up to 48 months in the implementation and comparison areas. Once the death is notified, a standardized, WHO-approved Verbal Autopsy (VA) will be performed, according to WHO guidelines and locally acceptable practices. The VA will focus is on confirming death, age and vaccination status. The total number of clusters per country is expected to range from 46-60. Assuming 4,000 children born per cluster per year, 30 months of vaccination and a total follow-up of 44 months, each cluster will contribute 23,134 person years at risk (pyar), allowing for 1% mortality in the first month of life, and 0.08% mortality for every month after the first month. This equates to a mortality risk of 22.2 per 1000 for children aged 5 to 36 months. A mortality risk of 21 per 1,000 equates to a rate, over 2.5 years, of 8.489455 per 1,000 pyar. Based on a minimum mortality rate of 8.5 per 1000 pyar, 23 clusters in each arm, each with an annual birth cohort of approximately 4,000 subjects, would have 80% power to detect, at the 5% significance level, a decrease of at least 10% in overall mortality in each country. With this mortality risk, the pilot evaluation it is estimated to have approximately 80% power to detect an interaction between gender and treatment of 1.15 (i.e an increased risk of mortality in girls of 1.035), compared with the 1.9-fold increase in risk among girls receiving RTS,S/AS01 in the RTS,S Phase 3 trial. FEASIBILITY (CROSS SECTIONAL HOUSEHOLD) SURVEYS) Three household surveys will be conducted to evaluate the programmatic feasibility to deliver a 4 dose schedule at baseline (before vaccination starts), 18 months and 30 months after start of vaccination. A sample size of 100 houses per cluster will estimate the cluster-specific coverage of RTS,S/AS01 to within 10% (ie 95% CI from 40 to 60%) using a conservative estimate of 50% coverage and a high response rate above 95% in each cluster. Assuming a design effect of 1.5 between clusters, the overall precision in RTS,S/AS01 and coverage estimates of other vaccines over the pilot programme's implementation and comparison areas will be 2% (ie 95%CI 48% to 52%) in each country. This will result in 15,800 (6,600 in Ghana, 4,600 each in Kenya and Malawi) households included in the surveys. The second household survey may be powered to generate coverage estimates in each arm, rather than in each cluster, to within ±2% of the true value. SENTINEL HOSPITAL SURVEILLANCE Four to eight sentinel hospitals will be identified in each country to collect information on a larger scale on the safety of the malaria vaccine in children aged less than 5 years admitted with a focus on cases of cerebral malaria and meningitis. The catchment area of each hospital (approximately a cluster) is expected to have an annual birth cohort of, and provide services for, approximately 4,000 children in the MVPE. Hence a total catchment area of 48,000 children in implementation areas and another 48,000 children in comparison areas will contribute to the hospital-based evaluation of safety across the programme (three countries, Ghana, Kenya and Malawi). This is expected to provide 80% power to detect a 1.7-fold increase in risk of cerebral malaria and 2.6-fold increase in risk of meningitis. Children admitted to the sentinel hospitals in this age group will be assessed for severe malaria and meningitis using a standardised surveillance approach.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 15800
Est. completion date December 2023
Est. primary completion date June 2023
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 1 Month to 59 Months
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Children aged 1-59 months Exclusion Criteria: - Children aged less than 1 month or greater than 59 months

Study Design


Intervention

Other:
Feasibility survey
A survey questionnaire will be administered at each household. At the baseline household survey, each child aged less than 5 years will be tested for malaria using a rapid malaria test.
Sentinel hospital surveillance
Cerebrospinal samples will be collected from all children hospitalised and suspected of having meningitis.
Community mortality surveillance
A verbal autopsy will be performed

Locations

Country Name City State
Ghana Kintampo Health Research Centre Kintampo
Kenya CDC Kenya Malaria Programme Kisumu
Malawi College of Medicine Blantyre

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
World Health Organization

Countries where clinical trial is conducted

Ghana,  Kenya,  Malawi, 

References & Publications (2)

Malaria vaccine: WHO position paper-January 2016. Wkly Epidemiol Rec. 2016 Jan 4;91(4):33-51. English, French. — View Citation

RTS,S Clinical Trials Partnership. Efficacy and safety of RTS,S/AS01 malaria vaccine with or without a booster dose in infants and children in Africa: final results of a phase 3, individually randomised, controlled trial. Lancet. 2015 Jul 4;386(9988):31-45. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60721-8. Epub 2015 Apr 23. Erratum in: Lancet. 2015 Jul 4;386(9988):30. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary The number of deaths of any cause Number of deaths of any cause in children aged 1-59 months. From 0 to 46 months after vaccination starts
Primary Number of children admitted with a diagnosis of probable and confirmed meningitis cases Number of children with probable and confirmed meningitis A probable case if in a suspected case, the macroscopic aspect of the CSF is turbid, cloudy or purulent; or the CSF leukocyte count is >10 cells/mm3. A confirmed case is if a suspected or probable case is laboratory confirmed by culturing or identifying (i.e. by polymerase chain reaction, immunochromatographic dipstick or latex agglutination) bacterial, viral or other aetiology in the CSF. From 0 to 30 months after vaccination starts
Primary Number of children admitted with a diagnosis of cerebral malaria Cerebral malaria is defined as Severe P. falciparum malaria with coma (Glasgow coma score < 11 in children two years of age or older [= 2 years] or Blantyre coma score < 3 in children less than two years of age [(< 2 years]); and If malaria with seizure: coma persisting for > 30 min after the seizure. Other treatable causes of coma should be excluded before diagnosing cerebral malaria (e.g. hypoglycaemia, bacterial meningitis) From 0 to 30 months after vaccination starts
Primary Number of children aged 12-23 months who have completed the primary series (the 3 dose regime) of the malaria vaccine Prevalence of children aged 12-23 months who had completed three doses of RTS,S/AS01 at the second household survey At 18 months after vaccination starts
Primary Number of children aged 27-38 months who have completed the 4th dose of the malaria vaccine Prevalence of children aged 27-38 months who had completed four doses of RTS,S/AS01 at the third household survey At 30 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of deaths in children by gender Number of deaths in children stratified by gender in children aged 1-59 months From 0 to 46 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of deaths in hospitalised children by gender Number of deaths in hospitalized children stratified by gender in children aged 1-59 months. From 0 to 46 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of malaria associated deaths in hospitalised children by gender Number of malaria specific deaths stratified by gender in hospitalized children aged 1-59 months. From 0 to 46 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of children with a diagnosis of severe malaria Hospital admissions with malaria which meet WHO criteria for a diagnosis of severe malaria. From 0 to 30 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of deaths excluding those attributed to trauma, poisoning and drowning Number of non traumatic deaths in children aged 1-59 months. From 0 to 46 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of children with a diagnosis of aetiology confirmed meningitis Number of hospital admissions which meet WHO criteria for a diagnosis of aetiologically confirmed meningitis admitted to sentinel hospitals 30 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of children with a diagnosis of suspected meningitis Number of hospital admissions which meet WHO criteria for a diagnosis of suspected meningitis admitted to sentinel hospitals From 0 to 30 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of children with a diagnosis of probable meningitis Number of hospital admissions which meet WHO criteria for a diagnosis of probable meningitis admitted to sentinel hospitals From 0 to 30 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of children with a diagnosis of malaria Number of hospital admissions which meet WHO criteria for a diagnosis of malaria admitted to sentinel hospitals From 0 to 30 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of children with a non-malaria diagnosis Number of hospital admissions which do not meet WHO criteria for a diagnosis of malaria admitted to sentinel hospitals From 0 to 30 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of children with a diagnosis of anaemia Number of hospital admissions which meet WHO criteria for a diagnosis of anaemia admitted to sentinel hospitals . Anaemia is haemoglobin less than 11g/dL. From 0 to 30 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of children who have received all their routine EPI vaccines as recommended by their national immunization schedule Routine EPI vaccines include all doses of OPV, pentavalent, rotavirus, pneumococcal and measles vaccines At 18 and 30 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of children who have received all the recommended malaria prevention and control measures Recommended malaria prevention and control measures include insecticide treated bed nets, IPTi and indoor residual spraying. At 18 and 30 months after vaccination starts
Secondary Number of children who have received all of the other key childhood interventions Other key childhood interventions include anti-helminth administration (deworming) and Vitamin A supplementation At 18 and 30 months after vaccination starts
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05073744 - Nalbuphine Versus Morphine for Perioperative Tumor Ablation Phase 4
Completed NCT03969641 - Safety of RIV4 Versus IIV4 in Pregnant Women Phase 4
Completed NCT05592951 - Safety and Tolerability of a Novel Amino-acid Based Hydration Drink in Healthy Volunteers N/A
Completed NCT04693429 - Clinical Study for the Evaluation of Safety and Tolerability of PRO-172 Ophthalmic Solution+ Phase 1
Completed NCT01636024 - To Assess the Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics, and Pharmacodynamics of Ascending Doses of Inhaled AZD7594 Phase 1
Completed NCT01415102 - A First In Human Study In Healthy People To Evaluate Safety, Toleration And Time Course Of Plasma Concentration Of Single Inhaled Doses Of PF-05212372. Phase 1
Completed NCT01243502 - A Study to Assess the Pharmacokinetics, Safety and Tolerability of CT327 in Healthy Male Volunteers Phase 1
Completed NCT06072170 - Single Ascending Doses of Kratom in Healthy Nondependent Adults With Opioid Experience Phase 1
Completed NCT05076253 - Efficacy of Ivermectin in COVID-19 Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT06060379 - Giochiamo 626 - Gaming for Health and Safety in Workplaces N/A
Recruiting NCT05298800 - Combined Immunization of COVID-19 Inactivated Vaccine With QIV and PPV23 Phase 4
Completed NCT05188638 - Safety of Ascending Single and Multiple Doses of Nebulised SoftOx Inhalation Solution in Healthy Subjects Phase 1
Completed NCT05145621 - Oral Bio-equivalence Study Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05580159 - New Generation mRNA Booster Vaccine Against Emerging VOCs Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT04596956 - Safety and Efficacy of Sodium Bicarbonate Ringer Injection Phase 4
Completed NCT03033329 - Single Dose Escalation and Multiple Dose Escalation Trial of an Intravenous Formulation of MRX-4 Phase 1
Terminated NCT01929811 - NeoMET Study in Neoadjuvant Treatment of Breast Cancer Phase 2
Completed NCT01193335 - Study Evaluating a 13-valent Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine in Preterm Compared to Term Infants. Phase 4
Completed NCT03300466 - A Study to Evaluate the Performance and Safety of GP0045 for Correction of Moderate to Severe Nasolabial Folds N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05686161 - mRNA Booster Vaccine(SW-BIC-213) Compared With Pfizer andSinopharm Against Emerging VOCs Phase 3