View clinical trials related to Schistosoma Mansoni.
Filter by:A group of 24 healthy volunteers are challenged one or three times with 20 male Schistosoma mansoni cercariae to investigate whether this leads to protection and to identify potential correlates of protection
Schistosomiasis is classified as among the world's neglected tropical diseases (NTD). Morbidity due to Schistosoma mansoni (S. mansoni) is greatest among school-age children who typically have the highest burden of infection. In 2001, World Health Organization (WHO) passed a resolution for large-scale mass drug administration (MDA) using chemotherapy to deworm vulnerable children through school-based programs. While MDA has significantly contributed to reducing the burden of these infections, several concerns still exist over the large-scale use of chemotherapeutic drugs in deworming. The large population of children and the high frequency of dosage may pose a challenge to the sustainability of these programs. Further, the MDAs exert increasing drug pressure on parasite populations, a circumstance that is likely to favor parasite genotypes that can resist chemotherapy. Additionally, the current school-based MDA does not consider child malnutrition a very common malady in African countries. The greatest shortcoming is that currently approved S. mansoni chemotherapeutic treatment, Praziquantel is not recommended for children under six years of age due to its perceived toxicity. This excludes a highly vulnerable group from treatment. The above has called for alternative management options for S. mansoni among school and pre-school age children. The current study seeks to test the feasibility of the use of a nutritional supplement (Ujiplus®), as a potential deworming strategy against S. mansoni. Ujiplus® is a porridge flour fortified with papaya (Carica papaya) seeds extracts. In a previous study (NCT 027-25255), the product was found to have an effect on soil-transmitted helminths among a group of school children with no serious adverse events. We intend to evaluate the efficacy of Ujiplus® when given through school feeding programs and compare the outcome with praziquantel- the recommended MDA agent for deworming school children. The investigators will design and formulate the Ujiplus®, and test it among children in four primary schools in Mbita, Homabay county, Kenya.
The SchistoSAM study is an open label, two-arm, individually-randomized controlled trial with a non-inferiority design, conducted in northern Senegal. The study aims at determining if the efficacy of one and of repeated courses of artesunate-mefloquine (AM) is respectively similar to or higher than that of a standard praziquantel (PZQ) treatment. Secondly, the study will assess if novel DNA- and antigen-based diagnostics are more accurate than microscopy in assessing antischistosomal treatment response.
Groups of 3 or 7 volunteers will be exposed to a predetermined number of male Schistosoma mansoni cercariae until 10 volunteers are found infected.
The objective of this study is to determine the strategy for mass drug administration (MDA) which provides the greatest reductions in prevalence and intensity of Schistosoma mansoni in school-aged children after 4 years of intervention.
The purpose of this study is to determine the comparative efficacy of artesunate plus sulfamethoxypyrazine-pyrimethamine versus Praziquantel in the treatment of school children infected with S.mansoni in western Kenya.