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RecruitingNCT06923592

Serological Testing and Treatment for Plasmodium Vivax Malaria: a Trial in Ethiopia and Madagascar

Serological Testing and Treatment for Plasmodium Vivax Malaria: a Cluster-Randomised Trial in Ethiopia and Madagascar

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
19,200 (estimated)
Sponsor
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
12 Months
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The resilience of P. vivax to malaria elimination efforts is due to its ability to form dormant liver stages (hypnozoites) that reactivate weeks to months after the initial infection causing recurrent episodes of malaria (relapses) and ongoing parasite transmission. Relapses account for a majority of recurrent infections and clinical cases of P. vivax malaria, and therefore have a significant effect on morbidity at the individual level. With current technology, it is not possible to directly measure hypnozoite biomarkers. Rather than directly detecting hypnozoites, our team developed an indirect approach by measuring antibodies induced by the primary blood-stage infection. Antibodies to different blood-stage antigens decay at different rates. Measuring antibodies to a carefully selected panel of P. vivax antigens can aid to identify individuals who have been infected within the previous 9 months (approximately the lifespan of hypnozoites). A serological test based on selected P. vivax antigens can detect recent exposure and predict future relapses. Coupling this test with a safe and efficacious primaquine treatment regimen, results in a population-based intervention to target the hypnozoite reservoir. This intervention is referred to as Plasmodium vivax Serological Testing and Treatment (PvSeroTAT). PvSTATEM is a cluster randomised trial in Madagascar and Ethiopia. This study will provide insights into the feasibility, acceptability, and efficacy of the PvSeroTAT approach. In this study, individuals, randomised by clusters, will be tested for the presence of serological markers of a recent P. vivax infection, followed by a targeted drug treatment intervention aimed at killing P. vivax hypnozoites.

Detailed description

In each country, 24 clusters (48 clusters in total) will be randomly allocated using computer generated numbers to one of the two interventions: Arm 1 (PvSeroTAT intervention) or Arm 2 (Control arm). Within each cluster, approximately 400 participants (range 100-600) will be enrolled, based on the trial's inclusion and exclusion criteria. At baseline (month 0) and month 6 serology for P. vivax infections will be performed in all study participants. In the clusters in the PvSeroTAT arm, participants with a positive P. vivax serology at baseline or month 6 will be approached for treatment. First G6PD enzyme activity will be measured. If the enzyme activity is normal and no other contra-indication for treatment are found, the participants will be treated with 14 days of primaquine 0.25mg/kg/day (Ethiopia) or 7 days of primaquine 0.5mg/kg/day (Madagascar), and a three-day course of either chloroquine (Ethiopia) or artesunate-amodiaquine (Madagascar). It is possible that a participant could receive a radical P. vivax treatment at both baseline (month 0) and month 6. Participants will be monitored for side effects and adherence during the first 7 days after the start of antimalarial treatments. In addition, blood samples will be taken to measure hemoglobin levels to monitor for post-treatment hemolysis. In the clusters in both arms, the incidence of malaria will be monitored through passive case detection in health posts up to 18 months after the first intervention. All cases that are detected during the passive case detection will be treated according to the national guidelines. At month 12 and month 18 of the study, a cross sectional survey will be conducted in all study clusters. Blood samples will be taken to determine the prevalence of P. vivax and P. falciparum through PCR assays.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
COMBINATION_PRODUCTPvSeroTATTwo rounds (month 0 and month 6) of serological screening for antibodies against P. vivax in the blood of all eligible cluster inhabitants. In the clusters in the PvSeroTAT arm, participants with a positive P. vivax serology at baseline or month 6 will be treated with 14 days of primaquine 0.25mg/kg/day (Ethiopia) or 7 days of primaquine 0.5mg/kg/day (Madagascar), and a three-day course of either chloroquine (Ethiopia) or artesunate-amodiaquine (Madagascar)
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTControlTwo rounds (month 0 and month 6) of serological screening for antibodies against P. vivax in the blood of a subset of eligible cluster inhabitants. Serological status will be assessed at a later stage (months later) and will not lead to treatment of sero-positive individuals.

Timeline

Start date
2025-05-12
Primary completion
2027-04-28
Completion
2027-04-28
First posted
2025-04-11
Last updated
2026-03-24

Locations

2 sites across 2 countries: Ethiopia, Madagascar

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06923592. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.