| Literature DB >> 29374672 |
Oliver F Medzihradsky1,2, Immo Kleinschmidt3,4, Davis Mumbengegwi5, Kathryn W Roberts1, Patrick McCreesh6, Mi-Suk Kang Dufour7, Petrina Uusiku8, Stark Katokele8, Adam Bennett1, Jennifer Smith1, Hugh Sturrock1, Lisa M Prach1, Henry Ntuku1, Munyaradzi Tambo4, Bradley Didier9, Bryan Greenhouse10, Zaahira Gani11, Ann Aerts11, Roly Gosling1, Michelle S Hsiang1,2,6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: To interrupt malaria transmission, strategies must target the parasite reservoir in both humans and mosquitos. Testing of community members linked to an index case, termed reactive case detection (RACD), is commonly implemented in low transmission areas, though its impact may be limited by the sensitivity of current diagnostics. Indoor residual spraying (IRS) before malaria season is a cornerstone of vector control efforts. Despite their implementation in Namibia, a country approaching elimination, these methods have been met with recent plateaus in transmission reduction. This study evaluates the effectiveness and feasibility of two new targeted strategies, reactive focal mass drug administration (rfMDA) and reactive focal vector control (RAVC) in Namibia. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This is an open-label cluster randomised controlled trial with 2×2 factorial design. The interventions include: rfMDA (presumptive treatment with artemether-lumefantrine (AL)) versus RACD (rapid diagnostic testing and treatment using AL) and RAVC (IRS with Acellic 300CS) versus no RAVC. Factorial design also enables comparison of the combined rfMDA+RAVC intervention to RACD. Participants living in 56 enumeration areas will be randomised to one of four arms: rfMDA, rfMDA+RAVC, RACD or RACD+RAVC. These interventions, triggered by index cases detected at health facilities, will be targeted to individuals residing within 500 m of an index. The primary outcome is cumulative incidence of locally acquired malaria detected at health facilities over 1 year. Secondary outcomes include seroprevalence, infection prevalence, intervention coverage, safety, acceptability, adherence, cost and cost-effectiveness. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Findings will be reported on clinicaltrials.gov, in peer-reviewed publications and through stakeholder meetings with MoHSS and community leaders in Namibia. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02610400; Pre-results. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Plasmodium falciparumzzm321990; Namibia; artemether-lumefantrine; cluster randomisation; elimination; indoor residual spraying; low transmission; malaria; mass drug administration; pirimiphos-methyl; presumptive treatment; reactive case detection; vector control
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29374672 PMCID: PMC5829876 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-019294
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
2×2 factorial study design showing four arms
| Reactive and targeted strategies addressing human reservoir | |||
| RACD* | rfMDA† | ||
| Reactive and targeted strategies addressing mosquito reservoir | No RAVC | RACD only arm | rfMDA only arm |
| RAVC‡ | RACD+RAVC arm | rfMDA+RAVC arm | |
*RACD: administering rapid diagnostic test to individuals living in a 500 m radius around an index case; treating positives with artemether-lumefantrine.
†rfMDA: presumptively treating individuals living in a 500 m radius around an index case using artemether-lumefantrine, without testing.
‡RAVC: spraying long-acting insecticide Actellic 300CS to interior walls of living structures of individuals sleeping in a seven household radius around an index case.
RACD, reactive case detection; RAVC, reactive vector control; rfMDA, reactive focal mass drug administration.
Figure 1Study area in western Zambezi Region, Namibia, showing intervention areas and non-study areas. RACD, reactive case detection; RAVC, reactive vector control.
Figure 2Flow of study procedures.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for interventions
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
| Index case triggers a reactive intervention |
Index case with RDT or microscopy confirmed malaria identified passively at a study health facility Triggering index case resides (or stayed≥1 night within prior 4 weeks) in study enumeration area |
Triggering index case diagnosed by active case detection |
| Receipt of test (rfMDA or RAVC) or control (RACD) intervention |
Individual resides (or stayed≥1 night within prior 4 weeks) in study enumeration area within 500 m of home of triggering index case (RACD or rfMDA) Household located in study enumeration area among six closest households to triggering index case household (RAVC) |
Study intervention already implemented in individual’s household during the prior 5 weeks (RACD or rfMDA) Study intervention already implemented in individual’s household during current transmission season (RAVC) Household sprayed by MoHSS with DDT or deltamethrin in the past 24 hours Household head refusal to participate (RAVC) Individual level refusal to participate (RACD or rfMDA) Refusal of RAVC is not an exclusion criterion for RACD or rfMDA. Refusal of rfMDA or RACD is not an exclusion criterion for RAVC |
| AL administration |
Meets above inclusion criteria for rfMDA or RACD |
Reported pregnancy in first trimester Prior regular menstruation followed by amenorrhea for most recent 4 weeks and refusal of pregnancy testing or positive pregnancy testing Weight under 5 kg Age under 6 months Severe/complicated malaria (based on clinical assessment) Prior allergy to AL Personal history of cardiac dysrhythmia Family history of long QT syndrome Regular intake of specified QT-prolonging medications* |
*Cardiac antiarrhythmic, neuroleptic, tricyclic antidepressant, prokinetic and antiemetic gastrointestinal, second generation antihistamine, opioid (methadone) and antimicrobial (macrolide and fluoroquinolone antibiotics, triazole antifungals) agents.
AL, artemether-lumefantrine; DDT, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane; MoHSS, Ministry of Health and Social Services; RACD, reactive case detection; RAVC, reactive vector control; RDT, rapid diagnostic test; rfMDA, reactive focal mass drug administration.
Method of outcome measurements
| Outcome | Measurement metrics |
| Incidence | Cumulative incidence of RDT or microscopy confirmed locally acquired cases identified at study health facilities |
| Seroprevalence | Prevalence of antibody response to validated |
| Infection prevalence | Prevalence of infection detected by ultrasensitive qPCR using whole blood |
| Intervention level coverage | Proportion of index cases for which a study intervention is implemented |
| Individual level coverage | RfMDA: Proportion of rfMDA-eligible residents of target area who take the first dose of AL |
| Safety | Frequency of serious adverse events |
| Acceptability | Quantitative assessment measured by proportion of eligible individuals who consent to receive the assigned intervention and proportion of participants sampled in endline survey who indicate they would participate in the intervention again if offered |
| Adherence | Among those selected for pill count, proportion of participants found to have completed AL course |
| Cost | Cost (materials, labour and infrastructure) per intervention event and per person enrolled, and in RACD arms, cost per additional infection found |
| Cost-effectiveness | Cost per case averted and incremental cost effectiveness ratio for rfMDA versus RACD, RAVC versus no RAVC and rfMDA+RAVC versus RACD alone (should the test interventions prove to be more effective than control) |
AL, artemether-lumefantrine; qPCR, quantitative PCR; RACD, reactive case detection; RAVC, reactive vector control; RDT, rapid diagnostic test; rfMDA, reactive focal mass drug administration.