Sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine is the current first-line therapy for uncomplicated malaria in Malawi. Significant resistance of the P. falciparum malaria parasite to this drug has led to an imminent need for the government of Malawi to identify a new first-line therapy for uncomplicated malaria and to implement that new therapy as policy. This protocol is the second of two protocols whose combined purpose is to provide efficacy and side effect data on four antimalarial drug combinations that are candidates for the next first-line therapy for uncomplicated malaria in Malawi. This protocol aims to assess the acceptability and tolerability of amodiaquine in Malawi. It is a double-blind study comparing amodiaquine plus artesunate (AQ-Art, one of the candidate combination therapies) to chlorproguanil/dapsone plus artesunate (CD-Art, another of the candidate combination therapies) in persons 5 years and older, to see if there is a higher incidence of abdominal pain and/or refusal to take the therapy in the AQ-Art group. Amodiaquine was removed from the Malawian national drug registry in 1995 because of a perceived association with abdominal pain. Although no studies were conducted to substantiate this, consensus among clinicians was that patients were refusing amodiaquine with increasing frequency, citing abdominal pain as the reason, so the drug was removed from the registry. Results from this study, along with the efficacy data from the sister protocol in children under five years of age, will help guide the National Malaria Control Program of Malawi in selecting their next first-line antimalarial therapy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
212
Kawale Health Center
Lilongwe, Lilongwe District, Malawi
Machinga District Hospital
Liwonde, Machinga District, Malawi
Matiki Health Center
Dwangwa, Nkhotakota District, Malawi
Incidence of abdominal pain on days 1, 2, and 3 in the two treatment groups
Rate of adequate clinical and parasitological response at 14 days
Rate of adequate clinical and parasitological response at 28 days
Mean percent change in blood haemoglobin concentration between day 0 and day 28
Incidence of adverse events other than abdominal pain during the period of observation
Rate of Early Treatment Failure (per WHO definition)
Rate of Late Clinical Failure (per WHO definition)
Rate of Late Parasitological Failure (per WHO definition)
Percent of patients with a decrease in haemoglobin concentration
Percent of patients with a decrease in haemoglobin concentration of >= 2g/dl
Prevalence of parasitemia on Day 2
Prevalence of parasitemia on Day 3
Gametocyte prevalence on Day 14
Gametocyte prevalence on day 28
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.