The research questions to be answered by this study are: 1. Is treatment with iron more effective at improving anemia if given at the time of a malaria episode or 1 month after the episode? 2. Which treatment timing is associated with more malaria episodes - 1 month delayed treatment or immediate treatment at the time of malaria? 3. Does timing of iron treatment affect later thinking processes and behavior?
The study population in this study will be children who are enrolled in our ongoing study of cerebral malaria and severe malarial anemia, "Pathogenesis of cognitive/neurologic deficits in central nervous system malaria", underway in Kampala, Uganda. The pathogenesis study seeks to address the question of why children with severe malaria have later problems in thinking. The study we are now proposing will build on this study by assessing whether children with severe malaria have iron deficiency, and if they do, whether treatment with iron at the time of malaria is less effective than treatment one month later. We believe that treatment one month later may be more effective because there is data that shows that the inflammation that occurs with a malaria episode may decrease the body's ability to absorb iron in the gut and to send iron to the places it is needed, like the bone marrow and the brain. We are doing this study to see if our hypothesis about more effective iron treatment if it is delayed is correct and assessing anemia prevalence, iron status, and long-term neurobehavioral development as outcomes. We have three study groups: children with cerebral malaria, children with severe malarial anemia, and healthy community control children. Children found to be iron deficient will be randomized to receive iron (as ferrous sulphate syrup) either immediately or at their one-month follow-up visit. At 1-, 6, and 12-month follow-up visits changes in iron and inflammation indicators will be assessed. At the 6- and 12-month visits, neurocognitive behavior will also be evaluated and compared between the immediate vs. delayed iron groups. Malaria morbidity will be assessed via home visits during the period of iron supplementation and via clinic monitoring for the duration of the study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
NONE
Iron therapy will consist of a three-month course of ferrous sulphate syrup. For children with Hb ≥ 7 g/dL, each daily dose will be based on 2 mg iron/kg body weight.
Mulago Hospital
Kampala, Uganda
Hemoglobin change, anemia prevalence, and socioemotional behavior in the immediate iron vs. delayed iron groups
Time frame: 6 months
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Enrollment
239