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RecruitingNCT05951595

A Study to Find Out if a Combination of 3 Medicines for the Treatment of Malaria Works as Well and is as Safe and Tolerable as Combinations of 2 Medicines

An Open-label, Randomised, Controlled, Non-inferiority Trial to Compare the Efficacy, Safety and Tolerability of a Fixed Dose Triple Artemisinin-based Combination Therapy (TACT) Artemether-lumefantrine-amodiaquine Versus First-line Artemisinin-based Combination Therapies (ACTs) for the Treatment of Uncomplicated Plasmodium Falciparum Malaria

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,680 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Oxford · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
6 Months
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this open-label randomised, controlled, non-inferiority trial is to assess and compare the efficacy, tolerability and safety of a fixed dose TACT artemether-lumefantrine-amodiaquine (ALAQ) to the ACTs artemether-lumefantrine (AL), artesunate-amodiaquine (ASAQ) (with single low-dose primaquine in some sites) for the treatment of uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria in patient. The main question it aims to answer is whether ALAQ, a fixed dose TACT, is as efficacious, safe and tolerable in comparison with AL and ASAQ. Participants will be enrolled, admitted and randomised to receive the study drug (ALAQ, AL or ASAQ). Patients will receive directly observed treatments and will be followed up at least once daily for the first 3 days after enrolment followed by weekly visits from D7 up to D42. Patients will be asked to report to the clinics between scheduled visits in case of any illness or other symptoms or complaints.

Detailed description

Study participants with an uncomplicated P. falciparum monoinfection complying with all the inclusion criteria and without any of the exclusion criteria will be enrolled and randomised to three arms TACT (ALAQ), ACT1 (AL), ACT2 (ASAQ) at the sites in Africa and two arms TACT (ALAQ) and ACT (AL) at the site in Asia. Competitive recruitment with overall trial sample size 1,680 subjects (840 ALAQ, 420 AL, 420 ASAQ, i.e. a 2:1:1 ratio overall). In lower transmission settings (Annual Parasite Incidence \<50 per 1000 population per year) the treatment will include a single 0.25 mg/kg gametocytocidal dose of primaquine as recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) for patients ≥10 kg. Primaquine may be given if local treatment policy includes it. Participants will be admitted for three days to an in-patient unit for directly observed treatment and to perform all the required study procedures from D0H0 (time of first dose intake) to D3 (H72). They will be followed up weekly starting D7 up to D42. Microscopy to detect and quantify malaria parasitaemia will be performed daily (more frequently in participants with parasite density of \>5000/µL at screening) during hospitalization and at all weekly and unscheduled visits. In participants with parasite densities \>5000/µL at screening, parasite clearance rates will be assessed by repeated assessments of the parasite counts after the start of the antimalarial treatments. A capillary blood sample will be taken at each of the time-points for these parasite counts. A physical examination and measurements of vital signs along with a symptom questionnaire will be performed and recorded through a standardized method at baseline, daily during admission and weekly during follow up through D42 and at all unscheduled visits. Safety assessments will be performed by measuring markers of renal and hepatic toxicity, haemoglobin, platelet counts, absolute and differential white blood cell counts and electrocardiographs (ECGs). ECGs will be performed during hospitalization (H0, H4, and 4 hours after the last dose) and day 42 of follow up to assess and compare the effect of the TACT and ACTs on QT or corrected QT (QTc) intervals. Pharmacokinetic measurements will be linked to measures of efficacy and toxicity. To reduce the burden of blood draws, especially in children, a population pharmacokinetic approach requiring sparse blood sampling will be followed in a subset of participants. Blood samples for parasite genotyping as well as genomic and transcriptomic studies will be collected at baseline and also on the day of a recurrent infection. In selected study sites, P. falciparum parasites will be cryopreserved for in vitro antimalarial drug sensitivity testing. Where possible, ex vivo or in vitro assessments of parasite susceptibility to artemisinins and partner drugs will be assessed. The in vivo and ex vivo data on artemisinin and partner drug sensitivity will potentially be used to identify new genetic or transcriptomic markers/patterns of artemisinin or partner drug resistance. The trial has been funded by Global Health Innovative Technology Fund.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGArtemether-Lumefantrine-Amodiaquine (ALAQ)A new fixed-dose combination containing artemether, lumefantrine and amodiaquine (ALAQ) will be used in the trial. Each paediatric (dispersible) tablet will contain 20 mg artemether, 120 mg lumefantrine, 40 mg amodiaquine. Two formulations of (non-dispersible/hard) tablets, containing 50 mg or 60 mg artemether, 300 or 360 mg lumefantrine and 100 or 120 mg amodiaquine, will be used for adolescents or adults. The treatments will be administered in 6 doses over 3 days at H0, H8, H24, H36, H48 and H60. The target dosing will be in line with the ranges recommended by the WHO (total dose of 5-24 mg/kg of artemether, 29-144 mg/ kg of lumefantrine, 22.5-45 mg/kg of amodiaquine).
DRUGArtemether-Lumefantrine (AL)A fixed-dose combination of AL will be used in the trial. Each paediatric (dispersible or non-dispersible) tablet will contain 20 mg artemether, 120 mg lumefantrine and adult (non-dispersible) tablets will contain 80 mg artemether, 480 mg lumefantrine. Treatment doses will be administered in 6 doses over 3 days at H0, H8, H24, H36, H48 and H60. The target dosing will be in line with the ranges recommended by the WHO.
DRUGArtesunate-Amodiaquine (ASAQ)ASAQ will also be administered as a fixed dose combination. The tablets will contain 25 mg of artesunate and 67.5 mg of amodiaquine in the paediatric formulation and 100 mg artesunate, 270 mg amodiaquine in the adult formulation. The dosing will be administered once a day for 3 days at H0, H24 and H48 according to the schedule currently recommended by the WHO.

Timeline

Start date
2025-09-11
Primary completion
2026-07-31
Completion
2026-07-31
First posted
2023-07-19
Last updated
2025-11-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Rwanda

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05951595. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.