Schallig Henk Dfh, Tinto Halidou, Sawa Patrick, Kaur Harparkash, Duparc Stephan, Ishengoma Deus S, Magnussen Pascal, Alifrangis Michael, Sutherland Colin J
Department of Medical Microbiology-Parasitology Unit, Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Institute for Health Sciences Research-Clinical Research Unit (IRSS-CRUN), Nanoro, Burkina Faso.
BMJ Glob Health. 2017 Aug 30;2(3):e000371. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2017-000371. eCollection 2017.
Management of uncomplicated malaria relies on artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs). These highly effective regimens have contributed to reductions in malaria morbidity and mortality. However, artemisinin resistance in Asia and changing parasite susceptibility to ACT in Africa have now been well documented. Strategies that retain current ACT as efficacious treatments are urgently needed.
We present an open-label, randomised three-arm clinical trial protocol in three African settings representative of varying malaria epidemiology to investigate whether prolonged ACT-based regimens using currently available formulations can eliminate potentially resistant parasites. The protocol investigates whether a sequential course of two licensed ACT in 1080 children aged 6-120 months exhibits superior efficacy against acute malaria and non-inferior safety compared with standard single-course ACT given to 540 children. The primary endpoint is PCR-corrected clinical and parasitological response at day 42 or day 63 of follow-up. Persistence of PCR-detectable parasitaemia at day 3 is analysed as a key covariate. Secondary endpoints include gametocytaemia, occurrence of treatment-related adverse events in the double-ACT versus single-ACT arms, carriage of molecular markers of drug resistance, drug kinetics and patient adherence to treatment.
This protocol addresses efficacy and safety of sequential ACT regimens in malaria in Africa. The approach is designed to extend the useful life of this class of antimalarials with maximal impact and minimal delay, by deploying licensed medicines that could be swiftly implemented as sequential double ACT by National Malaria Control Programmes, before emerging drug resistance in Africa becomes a major threat to public health.
单纯性疟疾的治疗依赖于以青蒿素为基础的联合疗法(ACTs)。这些高效治疗方案有助于降低疟疾的发病率和死亡率。然而,亚洲出现的青蒿素耐药性以及非洲寄生虫对ACT敏感性的变化现已得到充分记录。迫切需要能够使现有ACT仍保持有效治疗效果的策略。
我们在三个代表不同疟疾流行情况的非洲地区开展了一项开放标签、随机三臂临床试验方案,以研究使用现有制剂的延长疗程ACT方案能否消除潜在的耐药寄生虫。该方案研究了在1080名6至120个月大的儿童中连续使用两种已获许可的ACT疗程,与给予540名儿童的标准单疗程ACT相比,对急性疟疾是否具有更高的疗效以及安全性是否不劣于标准单疗程ACT。主要终点是随访第42天或第63天经PCR校正的临床和寄生虫学反应。将第3天PCR检测到的寄生虫血症持续存在情况作为关键协变量进行分析。次要终点包括配子体血症、双ACT组与单ACT组中治疗相关不良事件的发生情况、耐药分子标志物的携带情况、药物动力学以及患者对治疗的依从性。
本方案探讨了非洲疟疾连续ACT方案的疗效和安全性。该方法旨在通过部署可由国家疟疾控制规划迅速作为连续双ACT实施的已获许可药物,在非洲出现的耐药性成为对公共卫生的重大威胁之前,以最大的影响和最小的延迟来延长这类抗疟药的使用寿命。