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Active Not RecruitingNCT04978272

Modifying Immunity in Children With DihydROartemisinin-Piperaquine (MIC-DroP)

Enhancing Immunity to Malaria in Young Children With Effective Chemoprevention

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
924 (actual)
Sponsor
Grant Dorsey, M.D, Ph.D. · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
2 Months
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The MIC-DroP trial will test the hypothesis that preventing early life blood-stage malaria antigenic exposure with intermittent preventive therapy (IPT) enhances protective immunity to malaria. This study will take advantage of a unique opportunity to study infants born to mothers followed in a NIH-funded randomized controlled trial of novel intermittent preventive therapy in pregnancy (IPTp) regimens (NCT04336189). MIC-DroP will leverage the parent IPTp study to enroll 924 children who will be randomized at 8 weeks of age to receive no intermittent preventive therapy in childhood (IPTc), monthly DP from 8 weeks to 1 year of age, or monthly DP from 8 weeks to 2 years of age, and then follow children to 4 years of age. The primary outcome of this study will be to compare the incidence of malaria from 2 to 4 years of age among children randomized to receive no IPTc, monthly DP for the first year of life, or monthly DP for the first two years of life. Investigators will also leverage this trial to evaluate immune development during early childhood.

Detailed description

This study is a phase III, double-blind, randomized controlled trial of 924 HIV- uninfected children. Children born to mothers enrolled in an ongoing clinical trial of different IPTp arms in pregnancy (NCT 04336189) will be enrolled in this study. In the parent IPTp study, 2757 HIV-uninfected pregnant women will be randomized to receive IPTp with monthly sulfadoxine pyrimethamine (SP) alone, monthly DP alone, or both monthly SP+DP, and followed through 4 weeks postpartum. At the 4-week postpartum visit, we will enroll and randomize 924 eligible children to one of three IPTc arms: no IPTc (the current standard of care), monthly DP from 8 weeks to 1 year of age, or monthly DP from 8 weeks to 2 years of age. Study drugs will be placebo controlled and all doses of study drug will be given by directly observed therapy (DOT). The intervention phase will be completed at 2 years of age, and children followed through 4 years of age. Study participants will be followed for all of their outpatient medical care in our dedicated study clinic. Malaria incidence will be measured via active case detection. Routine assessments will be performed in the study clinic for all study participants every 4 weeks, including passive surveillance for parasitemia by quantitive polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Venous blood will be collected for immunologic assays three times annually from 8 weeks to 4 years of age. All maternal assessments conducted during the parent IPTp study, including assessment for maternal malaria exposure (e.g., placental histology) household survey, will be available and linked to each study participant.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGDihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DP)Duo-Cotecxin 20mg/160mg tabs by Holley-Cotec, Beijing, China Each treatment with DP will consist of half-strength tablets given once a day for 3 consecutive days according to weight-based guidelines.
OTHERDP PlaceboPlacebos will be identical appearance to DP.

Timeline

Start date
2022-02-08
Primary completion
2026-08-31
Completion
2026-08-31
First posted
2021-07-27
Last updated
2026-04-13

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Uganda

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04978272. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.