Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02237586

Effect of Plasmodium Falciparum Exposure and Sickle Cell Trait on Infection Rates and Kinetics After IV Administration of PfSPZ Challenge

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
25 (actual)
Sponsor
Sanaria Inc. · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 30 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The study is designed to establish infectivity of Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites (PfSPZ) via intravenous (IV) administration in three groups with different malaria immunity-status: 1. Adults with a history of lifelong malaria exposure without sickle cell trait (HbAA) 2. Adults with a history of lifelong malaria exposure with sickle cell trait (HbAS) 3. Adults without previous malaria episodes without sickle cell trait (HbAA) Initially a dose of 3,200 PfSPZ will be given and the time until thick blood smear positivity after challenge will be assessed. If in any of the groups with a history of lifelong malaria exposure, 50% or less of individuals become thick blood smear positive during the 28 days post injection of PfSPZ Challenge, the dose will be increased 4-fold to 12,800 PfSPZ in this group.

Detailed description

LACHMI-001 is a partially-blinded, human pilot trial to study immunity against P. falciparum malaria in a controlled infection setting. The main objective is to characterise the role of sickle cell trait and naturally acquired immunity in development of malaria, defined by positive smear for P. falciparum and signs or symptoms associated with malaria. Three groups of volunteers will receive radical cure treatment and subsequently PfSPZ Challenge by IV administration. The groups are: 1. Adults with naturally acquired immunity and HbAA (Group IA, n=10-20) 2. Adults with naturally acquired immunity and HbAS (Group IS, n=10-20) 3. Adults without previous exposure to malaria and HbAA (Group NI, n=5) The initial challenge dose of 3,200 PfSPZ administered once intravenously leads to consistent infection in naïve adults (15/15 in prior studies) and thus should infect all volunteers in Group 3. However, volunteers with naturally acquired immunity or sickle cell trait might require a higher dose. Thus if 50% or less of volunteers become parasitemic in Groups IA or IS, 10 additional volunteers will be enrolled and challenged with 12,800 PfSPZ. All volunteers will be healthy adults aged 18 to 30 years. Safety and infectivity data will be collected for each of the regimens and dose-levels. Effective treatment is initiated immediately upon development of parasitemia together with the presence of symptoms associated with malaria. Laboratory staff reading blood films and processing samples will be blinded to group allocation. Volunteers and clinical investigators will be blinded to group allocation among the IA and IS groups.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BIOLOGICALPfSPZ Challengelive, aseptic, cryopreserved P. falciparum sporozoites

Timeline

Start date
2014-07-01
Primary completion
2014-09-01
Completion
2015-02-01
First posted
2014-09-11
Last updated
2015-04-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Gabon

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02237586. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.