Title

Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention Versus Home Management of Malaria in Children Under 5 Years in Ghana
An Individually Randomised Trial of Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention Versus a Long-acting Artemisinin Combination Therapy for the Prevention of Malaria and Anaemia in Children Living in an Area of Extended Seasonal Transmission in Ghana.
  • Phase

    Phase 4
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Study Participants

    2400
In areas of Africa where malaria is only a problem during a short rainy season, monthly courses of antimalarial drugs can provide very effective prevention of malaria in children. This approach, called intermittent preventive treatment in children (IPTc) but now known as Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention (SMC), may also be useful in large areas of Africa where malaria is transmitted for longer each year. It is uncertain if IPTc would be effective, acceptable to communities or sustainable when delivered over a longer period, but this is an important public health question of key interest to policy makers, because in areas with a longer transmission season, the burden of malaria is typically higher than in highly seasonal areas.

Another form of prevention that would be operationally easier for African countries to put into practice would be to treat malaria patients with long-lasting antimalarials, which protect children against further malaria episodes for several weeks. Because malaria disproportionately affects certain high risk children more than others, causing repeated attacks of fever and leading to severe anaemia, long-acting drugs may be a simple and effective way to target limited resources at the individuals who most need protection. This may be particularly beneficial where malaria is a seasonal problem, because repeated malaria attacks will not only be borne by a few unfortunate children, but will also occur close together in time.

The investigators propose a clinical trial to evaluate these two forms of chemoprevention in Kumasi, Ghana, an area with an extended malaria transmission season. Children under 5 years of age currently have access to diagnosis and treatment of malaria via by community based health workers. Children enrolled in the study will receive either the standard community-based diagnosis and treatment, treatment with a longer-acting artemisinin combination therapy (ACT), or standard care plus five monthly courses of seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC) during the peak in transmission.
Study Started
Jul 31
2012
Primary Completion
Dec 31
2012
Study Completion
Jul 31
2013
Last Update
Sep 18
2015
Estimate

Drug Artemether-lumefantrine combination

Drug Dihydroartemisinin Piperaquine combination

  • Other names: Duo-cotecxin

Drug Amodiaquine plus sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine combination

HMM using short-acting ACT Active Comparator

Home management of malaria using Artemether-lumefantrine combination (a short-acting ACT) for treatment in children with malaria diagnosed using RDTs

HMM using short-acting ACT plus SMC Experimental

Home management of malaria using using Artemether-lumefantrine combination (a short-acting ACT) for treatment in children with malaria diagnosed using RDTs plus seasonal malaria chemoprevention with Amodiaquine plus sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine combination.

HMM using a long-acting ACT Experimental

Home management of malaria using Dihydroartemisinin Piperaquine combination (a long-acting ACT) for treatment in children with malaria diagnosed using RDTs

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Children aged between 3-59 months
Care giver or parent willing to participate and have given informed consent
Children living in the study area

Exclusion Criteria:

Children who are unable to take and retain medication
Children who have a severe or chronic illness
Children who have a history of serious adverse reaction to the study drugs
No Results Posted