Malaria is a disease that affects many people in Africa. Malaria is caused by germs spread by mosquito bites. The purpose of this study is to compare the number of children who get malaria after receiving an experimental malaria vaccine (FMP2.1/AS02A) to the number of children who get malaria after receiving a vaccine for rabies (an approved vaccine that does not prevent malaria). The children will be assigned to one of the vaccine groups by chance. Participants and doctors will not know which vaccine was given. Study participants will include 400 children, ages 1-6 years, living in Bandiagara, Mali. Children will receive 3 vaccine doses, by injection, to their upper arm. Study procedures will include physical exams and several blood samples. Participants will be involved in the study for 26 months.
This is a randomized, controlled, phase II clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy, safety and immunogenicity of the apical membrane antigen-1 of Plasmodium (P.) falciparum (AMA-1) malaria vaccine FMP2.1/AS02A using rabies vaccine as a control in healthy children 1-6 years old in Bandiagara, Mali. This study is linked to DMID protocol 05-0146, which is a phase I dose escalation trial at the same site in the same population. In this study, 400 subjects will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive either 50 micrograms of FMP2.1 in 0.5 mL AS02A or rabies vaccine. Immunizations will be given on days 0, 30 and 60. Solicited adverse events will be recorded on the days of immunization and at 1, 2, 3 and 7 days after each immunization. Unsolicited adverse events will be recorded for 30 days after each immunization. Passive case detection will be used to capture clinical malaria episodes and adverse events including serious adverse events, and will occur by continuous availability of clinical care in a population with high utilization of this care. Active surveillance will be used to capture malaria infections and adverse events including serious adverse events. For active case detection, following the third dose, participants will be followed monthly for 6 months and then at 12, 18 and 24 months after randomization, for clinical assessment, malaria smear and hemoglobin. Routine monthly malaria smears will not be read immediately unless symptoms are present. Children will be followed for 2 years after the first immunization. Sera will be collected for anti-FMP2.1 antibody titers on the days of immunization and 1, 3, 6, 8, 12, 18 and 24 months after the first immunization. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) will be collected on the days of immunization, 30 days after the third immunization and 8, 12, 18 and 24 months after the first immunization. The study Final Report will be based on data collected up to 6 months after the assigned date of the third immunization. A supplemental report will include data from the entire 24-month observation period. Primary study objectives are to: determine the efficacy of FMP2.1/AS02A in children aged 1-6 years against first clinical malaria episodes (axillary temperature of greater than or equal to 37.5 degrees Celsius and parasitemia of greater than or equal to 2500/mm\^3) occurring between randomization and 6 months after the assigned date of the third immunization; and assess the safety of the vaccine in children aged 1-6 years. Secondary study objectives are to: describe the dynamics of anti-AMA-1 antibody responses in recipients of the malaria vaccine compared to natural responses in the control group; determine whether serum anti-AMA-1 IgG titer by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) 1 month after the third immunization correlates with protection against clinical malaria episode; measure allele-specific efficacy against parasites with AMA-1 genotypes homologous to and heterologous to the 3D7 clone of P. falciparum; determine vaccine efficacy against clinical malaria episodes occurring between randomization and 6 months after the assigned date of the third immunization; and if efficacy is observed based on the primary endpoint, to determine vaccine efficacy against first clinical malaria episode and all clinical episodes (using increasing parasitemia thresholds) occurring during 2 years after randomization.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
400
3 doses administered a month apart: 50 µg recombinant subunit protein FMP2.1 (Plasmodium falciparum Apical Membrane Antigen-1 from strain 3D7 expressed in and purified from Escherichia coli), adjuvanted with 0.5 mL of AS02A (proprietary oil-in-water emulsion and phosphate buffered saline with the immunostimulants monophosphoral lipid A and QS21).
White, freeze-dried vaccine for reconstitution with the diluent prior to use; dosage 1.0 mL of rabies vaccine.
University of Bamako, Malaria Research and Training Center
Bamako, Mali
Number of Subjects Reporting Solicited Adverse Events During the 7-day Surveillance Period After the First Vaccination
Solicited symptoms were recorded by study staff at clinic visits on Days 0, 1, 2 and 7 after each vaccination. "Reported Limitation of Arm Motion" refers to the parents' report of the symptom while "Limitation of Arm Motion" refers to the clinicians' assessment of the symptom, collected separately.
Time frame: 0-7 days after first vaccination
Number of Subjects Reporting Solicited Adverse Events During the 7-day Surveillance Period After the Second Vaccination.
Solicited symptoms were recorded by study staff at clinic visits on Days 0, 1, 2 and 7 after vaccination. "Reported Limitation of Arm Motion" refers to the parents' report of the symptom while "Limitation of Arm Motion" refers to the clinicians' assessment of the symptom, collected separately.
Time frame: 0-7 days after the second vaccination
Number of Subjects Reporting Solicited Adverse Events During the 7-day Surveillance Period After the Third Vaccination.
Solicited symptoms were recorded by study staff at clinic visits on Days 0, 1, 2 and 7 after vaccination. "Reported Limitation of Arm Motion" refers to the parents' report of the symptom while "Limitation of Arm Motion" refers to the clinicians' assessment of the symptom, collected separately.
Time frame: 0-7 days after the third vaccination
Number of Unsolicited Non-serious Adverse Events Reported During the 30-day Surveillance Period After the First Vaccination
Unsolicited non-serious adverse events reported are those occurring within 30 days after vaccination. The categories are the MedDRA System Organ Classes for which at least one adverse event was reported. All non-serious adverse events are included, regardless of severity or relationship to vaccination.
Time frame: Day 0-29 after first vaccination
Number of Unsolicited Non-serious Adverse Events Reported During the 30-day Surveillance Period After the Second Vaccination
Unsolicited non-serious adverse events reported are those occurring within 30 days after vaccination. The categories are the MedDRA System Organ Classes for which at least one adverse event was reported. All non-serious adverse events are included, regardless of severity or relationship to vaccination.
Time frame: Day 0-29 after second vaccination
Number of Unsolicited Non-serious Adverse Events Reported During the 30-day Surveillance Period After the Third Vaccination
Unsolicited non-serious adverse events reported are those occurring within 30 days after vaccination. The categories are the MedDRA System Organ Classes for which at least one adverse event was reported. All non-serious adverse events are included, regardless of severity or relationship to vaccination.
Time frame: Day 0-29 after third vaccination
Time to First Clinical Malaria Episode With Significant Parasitemia (2500/mm^3) and Temperature of Greater Than or Equal to 37.5 Degrees C.
Time to first clinical malaria episode is displayed in a life table format to display the number of subjects at risk, the number with first clinical episode and the number censored at each time point.
Time frame: Occurring between randomization and 6 months after the assigned date of the 3rd immunization.
Number of Subjects Reporting Serious Adverse Events
A serious adverse event was defined as any untoward medical occurrence that results in death, is life threatening, results in persistent or significant disability/incapacity, requires in-patient hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization or is a congenital anomaly/birth defect in the offspring of a study subject. In addition, important medical events that may jeopardize the participant or may require intervention to prevent one of the other outcomes listed above was considered serious.
Time frame: 24 months after initial vaccination
Incidence Density of Clinical Malaria Episode
Clinical malaria episode was defined by significant parasitemia (2500/mm\^3) and temperature of greater than or equal to 37.5 degrees C. Event rate was determined by dividing the number of episodes (150 for the Rabies group and 121 for the FMP2.1/ASO2A group) by the number of Person Years at Risk (PYAR) (126.341 for Rabies group and 127.411 for the FMP2.1/ASO2A group).
Time frame: Between randomization and 6 months after 3rd immunization.
Geometric Mean Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 Antibody Measured by Enzyme Linked ImmunoSorbent Assay (ELISA) at Day 0
Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 antibody were determined by ELISA from sera collected at Day 0 prior to the first vaccination.
Time frame: Day 0
Geometric Mean Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 Antibody Measured by ELISA at Day 30.
Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 antibody were determined by ELISA from sera collected at Day 30, prior to the second vaccination.
Time frame: Day 30 after initial vaccination
Geometric Mean Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 Antibody Measured by ELISA at Day 60.
Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 antibody were determined by ELISA from sera collected at Day 60, prior to the third vaccination.
Time frame: Day 60 after initial vaccination
Geometric Mean Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 Antibody Measured by ELISA at Day 90.
Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 antibody were determined by ELISA from sera collected at Day 90.
Time frame: Day 90 after initial vaccination
Geometric Mean Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 Antibody Measured by ELISA at Day 150.
Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 antibody were determined by ELISA from sera collected at Day 150.
Time frame: Day 150 after initial vaccination
Geometric Mean Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 Antibody Measured by ELISA at Day 240.
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Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 antibody were determined by ELISA from sera collected at Day 240.
Time frame: Day 240 after initial vaccination
Geometric Mean Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 Antibody Measured by ELISA at Day 364
Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 antibody were determined by ELISA from sera collected at Day 364.
Time frame: Day 364 after initial vaccination
Geometric Mean Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 Antibody Measured by ELISA at Day 547
Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 antibody were determined by ELISA from sera collected at Day 547.
Time frame: Day 547 after initial vaccination
Geometric Mean Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 Antibody Measured by ELISA at Day 730
Titers of Anti-FMP2.1 antibody were determined by ELISA from sera collected at Day 730.
Time frame: Day 730 after initial vaccination