Trials / Unknown
UnknownNCT05471544
Effectiveness, Feasibility and Acceptability of Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention in Aweil South County in South Sudan
Effectiveness, Feasibility and Acceptability of Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention in Aweil South County in Northern Bahr Eel Ghazal, South Sudan: A Type 2 Hybrid Effectiveness-implementation Study Using a Convergent Mixed-methods Approach
- Status
- Unknown
- Phase
- Phase 3
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 3,575 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Malaria Consortium · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 3 Months – 59 Months
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
This study aims to explore whether SMC is an effective intervention in the context of Northen Bahr el Gazal state, South Sudan. It also aims to assess the protective efficacy of the antimalarials used in SMC in the target population and investigate levels of parasite resistance in the study counties. If successful, this trial should provide the evidence for SMC to be included in malaria programming and policy in South Sudan. A Type II hybrid effectiveness-implementation study design will be used to evaluate the effects of a clinical intervention on relevant outcomes whilst collecting information on implementation. It is designed to determine feasibility and effectiveness of an innovative intervention, as well as the protective efficacy of the antimalarial drugs used. The study consists of five components: 1) A series of cross-sectional surveys establishing confirmed malaria cases in children; 2) A prospective cohort study to determine the protective efficacy of SPAQ (if SPAQ provides 28 days of protection from infection) and whether drug concentrations and/or resistance influence the duration of protection; 3) A resistance markers study in children 3-59 months in the research county; 4) Modelling the protective effect of SPAQ in South Sudan to determine where SMC could be a suitable malaria prevention strategy in other areas of the country, and 5) A process evaluation to understand feasibility and acceptability of the SMC intervention in South Sudan.
Detailed description
This is an implementation research study, using a Type II hybrid effectiveness-implementation study design, to evaluate the effects of a clinical intervention on relevant outcomes whilst collecting information on implementation. The study uses pragmatic implementation research with the objective of contributing to the development of practical recommendations for health policy, practice and potential scale up. It is designed as an implementation study to determine effectiveness and protective efficacy to gather evidence of its potential impact on health outcomes. Five monthly cycles of SMC will be implemented between June and October 2022 in one county, Aweil South, in Northern Bahr el Gazal state. The study will comprise the following six components : 1. Two cross-sectional surveys at the height of the malaria season to explore impact on malaria incidence 2. End-of-round survey 3. Prospective protective efficacy cohort study to determine if SPAQ provides 28 days of protection from infection and whether drug concentrations and/or resistance influence the duration of protection 4. Resistance markers study in children 3-59 months in the two research counties plus the two standard intervention counties to measure changes in resistance marker prevalence over time (pre and post within the same year and between years)
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| DRUG | Sulfadoxine pyrimethamine | Sulphadoxine is a slowly eliminated sulphonamide. It is used in a fixed dose combination of 20 parts sulphadoxine with 1 part pyrimethamine given orally or intramuscularly. The medicine is no longer recommended for the treatment of malaria. However, it is being used for Intermittent Preventive Treatment during pregnancy (IPTp) and as a co-packaged combination with amodiaquine for seasonal malaria chemoprevention. Sulphadoxine is readily absorbed from the GIT. It is widely distributed in body tissues and fluids and crosses the placenta into foetal circulation. It is also readily detectable in breast milk. It is excreted predominantly as the unchanged drug. |
| DRUG | Amodiaquine | Amodiaquine is a Mannich base 4 amino-quinoline that interferes with parasite haem detoxification. It is more effective than chloroquine in both chloroquine sensitive and resistant P. falciparum infections. However, there is cross-resistance between chloroquine and amodiaquine. It is readily absorbed in the GIT and rapidly converted in the liver to the active metabolite, desethylamodiaquine. Desethylamodiaquine is responsible for all the antimalarial effect. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2022-07-18
- Primary completion
- 2024-12-15
- Completion
- 2024-12-31
- First posted
- 2022-07-25
- Last updated
- 2024-03-25
Locations
1 site across 1 country: South Sudan
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05471544. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.