| Literature DB >> 30326952 |
Jessica Manning1, Chanthap Lon2, Michele Spring2, Mariusz Wojnarski2, Sok Somethy3, Soklyda Chann2, Panita Gosi2, Kin Soveasna3, Sabaithip Sriwichai2, Worachet Kuntawunginn2, Mark M Fukuda2, Philip L Smith2, Huy Rekol4, Muth Sinoun4, Mary So3, Jessica Lin5, Prom Satharath3, David Saunders2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Malaria remains a critical public health problem in Southeast Asia despite intensive containment efforts. The continued spread of multi-drug-resistant Plasmodium falciparum has led to calls for malaria elimination on the Thai-Cambodian border. However, the optimal approach to elimination in difficult-to-reach border populations, such as the Military, remains unclear. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Cambodia; Dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine; Elimination; Malaria; Mass drug administration; Permethrin; Primaquine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30326952 PMCID: PMC6192281 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-018-2931-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Outcomes
| Objectives | Outcomes/endpoints |
|---|---|
| Primary | |
| To compare the effectiveness of focused screening and treatment (FSAT) following current national treatment guidelines versus targeted monthly malaria prophylaxis (MMP) with DHA-piperaquine in combination with low-dose weekly primaquine (PQ) (22.5 mg) for 12 weeks | Absolute risk reduction in a cluster based on those individuals’ polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-corrected absence of parasitemia at the end of 6 months in the MMP versus FSAT clusters |
| Secondary | |
| Estimate the incremental benefit of insecticide-treated uniforms (ITU) over drug therapy and existing vector control interventions compared to a sham insecticide-treated uniform (sITU)a | Absolute risk reduction in a cluster based on those individuals’ PCR-corrected absence of parasitemia at the end of 6 monthsa |
| Assess the effectiveness of presumptive anti-relapse and transmission-blocking therapy with weekly low-dose primaquine (22.5 mg)a | Incidence of |
| Evaluate the safety and tolerability of blood-stage antimalarials and weekly low-dose primaquine at 12 weeks versus 8 weeks in treated MMP and FSAT volunteers, respectively | Number of hemolytic events or other serious adverse events in participants over 13 years of age receiving primaquine |
| Assess level of antimalarial drug resistance at the selected study sites | Number of all-species malaria recurrence, established molecular markers of drug resistance, and clinical failure rates based on WHO criteria |
| Define the proportion of asymptomatic carriers of malaria in the study population | Cumulative incidence and incidence density of PCR-corrected parasitemia and submicroscopic parasitemia in each arm |
| Define the epidemiology of malaria infection in volunteers developing malaria | Cumulative incidence and incidence density of parasitemia |
| Compare the sensitivity and specificity of the currently recommended malaria rapid diagnostic test of choice in Cambodia with RT-PCR | Retrospective assessment of the proportion of asymptomatic carriers that would have been missed by each test and an estimate of the incremental cost-effectiveness of each test |
| Compare sensitivity and specificity of two currently available rapid diagnostic tests to detect moderate to severe G6PD deficiency using quantitative G6PD testing as the reference standard | Retrospective assessment of the proportion of persons with moderate to severe deficiency who would have been missed with each screening modality, and an estimate of the cost-effectiveness of each test |
| Describe population demographics to include the acceptability of FSAT, malaria prophylaxis, and use of vector control measures among participants, including willingness to participate in future malaria elimination campaigns | Descriptive analysis of participants’ responses to survey questions pre and post study regarding FSAT, malaria prophylaxis, and use of vector control measures |
| Support host nation capabilities by improving the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces’ (RCAF’s) ability to diagnose, prevent, and treat malaria supported by robust data to achieve malaria elimination | A scalable military malaria elimination “unit of action” will be established at the provincial level, staffed by RCAF personnel trained during the course of the study |
aPilot study objective and endpoint added to assess operational feasibility given ongoing community concerns regarding these interventions. These endpoints are statistically underpowered and this data will be used to inform larger studies in the future
Fig. 1Study flow diagram
Table of times and events for adults and children over 12 years of age
| Event | Screen/enroll day 1 | Day 33 | Day 307 | Day 607 | Day 907 | Day 1207 | Day 1507 | Day 1807 | Malaria diagnosis/ recurrence2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a. Informed consent | X | ||||||||
| b. Medical history | X | ||||||||
| c. Physical exam | X | X | |||||||
| d. Brief clinical evaluation and vital signs1 | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||
| e. Malaria RDT, DBS, smear and PCR genotyping6 | 2 mL | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.5 mL | |
| i. CBC | 1 mL | 1 mL3 | |||||||
| k. Molecular resistance markers2 | 6 mL | ||||||||
| l. G6PD RDT, fluorescent spot, quantitative testing | 1.5 mL | ||||||||
| m. Gametocyte PCR | 2.5 mL | 2.5 | 2.5 | 2.5 | 2.5 | 2.5 | 2.5 | 2.5 mL | |
| n. Urine pregnancy test (women of child-bearing age) | X | X | X | X | |||||
| o. Malaria treatment4,5 | X | X | X | X | |||||
| Daily phlebotomy (mL) | 7 | 13 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 10 |
| Cumulative phlebotomy (approximately mL) | 7 | 11 | 15 | 19 | 23 | 27 | 31 | 41 |
1Brief clinical evaluation includes an interval medical history, vital signs and a directed physical exam as indicated
2Performed only for volunteers with smear-positive malaria. Those with PCR-positive malaria will be treated following national guidelines but will not have blood drawn for molecular markers of resistance
3To be drawn for G6PD-deficient volunteers only. All G6PD-deficient volunteers with > 10% of Hgb or HTC drop on D3 will have CBC on day 7
4Patients screening positive on microscopy and/or PCR for P. falciparum malaria in the FSAT arm will receive currently recommended blood-stage antimalarials under published national treatment guidelines as well as single, low-dose primaquine (15 mg). Volunteers with P. vivax will be treated with the currently recommended blood-stage agent (DHA-PIP), as well as primaquine – G6PD-normal volunteers will receive 15 mg daily for 14 days, while G6PD-deficient volunteer will receive 45 mg × 8 weeks. All volunteers in the MMP arm will receive a fixed-dose 3-day course of DHA-piperaquine at 0, 24 and 48 h starting on days 1, 30, and 60, and a weekly 22.5-mg dose of primaquine for 12 weeks. All therapy will be directly observed
5For all volunteers with recurrent malaria, rescue therapy will be with the recommended agent(s) per national guidelines
6May be repeated as medically indicated (e.g., if patient is malaria-positive or otherwise ill on enrollment). An additional 0.5 mL will be collected on the day of enrollment for baseline G6PD genotyping
7Time window of ± 7 days
CBC complete blood count, DBS dried blood spot, DHA-PIP dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine, G6PD glucose-6-phosphatase dehydrogenase, Hgb hemoglobin, PCR polymerase chain reaction, RDT rapid diagnostic test
Fig. 2.Study timeline for monthly malaria prophylaxis (MMP) intervention clusters. *Treat with artesunate and mefloquine. DHA-PIP dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine, GC gametocyte, RDT rapid diagnostic test, PCR polymerase chain reaction, G6PD glucose-6-phosphatase dehydrogenase, CBC complete blood count