Title
Intermittent Parasite Clearance (IPC) in Schools: Impact on Malaria, Anaemia and Cognition
Intermittent Parasite Clearance (IPC) in Schools: a Randomised Double-blind Placebo-controlled Trial of the Impact of IPC on Malaria, Anaemia and Cognition Amongst School Children in Kedougou, Senegal
Phase
N/ALead Sponsor
University of LondonStudy Type
InterventionalStatus
Completed No Results PostedIntervention/Treatment
sulfadoxine amodiaquine pyrimethamine ...Study Participants
860Although the risk of malaria is greatest in early childhood, significant numbers of schoolchildren remain at risk from malaria infection, clinical illness and death. By the time they reach school, many children have already acquired some clinical immunity and the ability to limit parasite growth, and thus most infections are asymptomatic and will go undetected and untreated. Asymptomatic parasitaemia contributes to anaemia, reducing concentration and learning in the classroom, and interventions aiming to reduce asymptomatic parasite carriage may bring education, as well as health, benefits.
Intermittent parasite clearance (IPC) delivered through schools is a simple intervention, which can be readily integrated into broader school health programmes, and may usefully supplement the community-distribution of insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) in countries with a policy of universal coverage of nets.
This study seeks to establish whether intermittent parasite clearance undertaken once a year at the end of the malaria transmission season can reduce malaria parasite carriage and anaemia amongst school-going children already using insecticide-treated nets, and its consequent impact on school attendance and performance, in order to assess its suitability for inclusion as a standard intervention in school health programmes in areas of seasonal malaria transmission.
Sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (500/25mg) according to age, given on day 1; Amodiaquine (200mg) according to age, given daily for 3 days
Placebo tablets, similar in appearance and taste to active treatment, given daily over 3 days
Children sleeping under a long-lasting insecticidal net (LLIN) receive an additional intermittent preventive treatment for clearance of asymptomatic malaria infection given once a year at the end of the malaria transmission season
Children sleeping under a long-lasting insecticidal net (LLIN) receive placebo
Inclusion Criteria: enrolled in participating elementary schooled provision of parental consent Exclusion Criteria: lack of consent chronic conditions which limit regular school attendance clinical malaria on the day of scheduled treatment (as defined as febrile, with a positive result in a rapid diagnostic test for malaria).