The purpose of this study is to determine whether P. falciparum infections in Kilifi District have developed tolerance to the artemisinin class of drugs.
Artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACT) are the treatment of choice for episodes of uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria in all endemic countries. Rapid clearance of pathogenic blood stage malaria parasites by artemisinins is associated with swift recovery from mild malaria and reduced mortality from severe forms of the disease. In Kenya, and most malaria endemic sub-saharan Africa, artemether-lumefantrine has been introduced as first-line treatment in the public health care sector in 2006. Alarmingly, despite the short time since the introduction of ACTs artemisinin-resistant P. falciparum malaria has already emerged in South-East Asia, an area that has historically been the cradle of global spreads of drug-resistant malaria parasites. In a previous study in Kilifi we have observed a significant drop in early response rates to treatment with two ACTs from 2005 to 2008. Conventional markers of potential changes in anti-parasitic host immunity, drug exposure, or baseline parasite biomass could not account for the observed time-dependent change in response rates. This protocol aims to establish with reasonable confidence whether P. falciparum infections in Kilifi District have developed tolerance to the artemisinin class of drugs. We propose to study treatment response rates to an established 7-day regimen of artesunate alone in the treatment of uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria in children aged 6 months to 10 years, at the KEMRI study site in Pingilikani, Kilifi District, Kenya. The study will also assess (i) pharmacokinetic parameters of artesunate; (ii) ex vivo and in vitro chemosensitivity of parasite isolates to DHA; (iii) genetic determinants of altered in vivo and in vitro responses to DHA; and (iv) ex vivo expression profiles in normally vs. slowly responding P. falciparum infections before and during treatment.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
175
Oral, once daily, 7-day regimen of artesunate 2mg/kg/day
Kadzinuni Dispensary
Kadzinuni, Kilifi County, Kenya
Junju Dispensary
Kilifi, Kenya
Pingilikani Dispensary
Kilifi, Kenya
The primary endpoint of this study will be the re-infection-adjusted day 28 failure rate
Cure is defined as clearance of asexual P. falciparum parasitemia until day 7 and no recrudescence of asexual P. falciparum parasitemia until day 28. Re-infections are defined by genetic fingerprinting methods as newly emerging parasite clones during follow-up.
Time frame: Day 0-28
The proportion of patients with positive malaria smears
The number of patients still having parasites at these time points divided by the total treated will give an estimate of early cure rates or estimates of early treatment failure rates as a percentage.
Time frame: 24hr, 48hr, 72hr
The percentage reduction of parasitaemia from baseline
These results will be used to compute the percentage of uncleared parasites so as to evaluate cases of early treatment failure according to the WHO criteria.
Time frame: 24hr, 48hr, 72hr
The mean time to parasite clearance
Estimated by parametric survival analysis will give an estimate of how long the drug takes to clear parasites from the time of first dosing till the time of the first negative smear.
Time frame: Up to day 7
The mean time to fever clearance
Estimated by parametric survival analysis mean time to fever clearance will be estimated to reflect the time it takes the the temperature to settle down consistently for at least 24 hours.
Time frame: Up to day 7
To estimate the rates for late clinical and parasitological failure rates
We will estimate the cumulative incidence of success and failure rates at days 28 and 42, by both PCR-uncorrected and PCR-corrected for recrudescence
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Time frame: Days 28 and 42