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Antimalarial Drug Susceptibility and Molecular Characterization of Plasmodium Vivax Isolates in Vietnam

A Randomised Controlled Trial to Assess the Antimalarial Drug Susceptibility and Molecular Characterization of Plasmodium Vivax Isolates in Vietnam

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01887821
Enrollment
330
Registered
2013-06-27
Start date
2013-02-28
Completion date
2015-06-30
Last updated
2016-09-30

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Plasmodium Vivax Malaria

Brief summary

This is a study of drug effectiveness for 2 treatments of vivax malaria, which is one of the two main types of malaria in Viet Nam. There are two important drugs used in Viet Nam for treating vivax malaria, Chloroquine and Artemisinin. Sometimes, when medicines are used for many years they become less effective at treating a disease, especially when they are not used at adequate doses according to national guidelines or when counterfeit drugs are available in the market. The purpose of this study is to check that Chloroquine and Artemisinin, are still effective for patients in Viet Nam. Participants in this study will be treated with either Dihydroartemisinin-Piperaquine (DHA-PPQ) or Chloroquine (CQ) for 3 days. Both drugs are recommended by the national guidelines to treat vivax malaria. The investigators would like to know if both of these treatments are equally effective so half of the patients in the study will be treated with DHA-PPQ and the other half will be treated with CQ. This way the investigators can compare the drugs to find out if one is better than the other. Participants will be followed for 3 days in hospital, then regularly by follow-up visits until the 63rd day. Tests will be done to determine the amount of drug and malaria parasites in the participant's body and how the blood cells react to the malaria. The parasite will be tested to determine what type it is and how it reacts to the treatment. The results of the study will be used to inform malaria treatment guidelines in Viet Nam.

Interventions

Sponsors

Institute of Malaria, Parasitology and Entomology, Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
Hospital for Tropical Diseases, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
CollaboratorOTHER
Agency for Science, Technology and Research
CollaboratorOTHER
Wellcome Trust
CollaboratorOTHER
Oxford University Clinical Research Unit, Vietnam
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
3 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Age \> 3 years; * Mono-infection with P. vivax, parasitemia \> 250/µl asexual forms for in vivo and \>8000 asexual parasites/µl blood for in vitro testing; * Presence of axillary or tympanic temperature ≥ 37.5 °C or history of fever during the past 24 h; * Ability to swallow oral medication; * Ability and willingness to comply with the study protocol for the duration of the study and to comply with the study visit schedule; * Informed consent/assent

Exclusion criteria

* Presence of general danger signs or severe malaria according to the definitions of WHO (2000); * Mixed infection with P.falciparum and P.vivax of other plasmodium species; * Presence of febrile conditions due to diseases other than malaria (e.g. measles, acute lower respiratory tract infection, severe diarrhoea with dehydration) or other known underlying chronic or severe diseases (e.g. cardiac, renal and hepatic diseases, HIV/AIDS); * Regular medication, which may interfere with antimalarial pharmacokinetics; * Received antimalarial drugs in the previous 48 hours; * History of hypersensitivity reactions or contraindications to any of the medicine(s) being tested or used as alternative treatment(s); * Splenectomy; * First trimester of pregnancy.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Proportion of patients with adequate response to treatmentDay 63Adequate response = adequate clinical and parasitological response. Absence of parasitaemia on day 63, irrespective of temperature, in patients who did not previously meet any of the criteria of early treatment failure, late clinical failure or late parasitological failure.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
The parasite clearance timeAssessed every 6 hours until Day 3, or two consecutive parasite negative slides.Defined as the time in hours from the first treatment dose to the first of two consecutive parasitemia counts of zero.
Fever clearance timeAssessed every 6 hours until Day 3, or 24 hours without feverDefined as the time in hours from the first treatment dose to the start of the first sustained period of 24 hours without fever
Proportion of patients classified as Early Treatment FailuresDay 63One or more of the following: * danger signs or severe malaria on day 1, 2 or 3 in the presence of parasitaemia; * parasitaemia on day 2 higher than on day 0, irrespective of temperature; * parasitaemia on day 3 with temperature ≥ 37.5 ºC; * parasitaemia on day 3 ≥ 25% of count on day 0.
Proportion of patients classified as Late Clinical FailuresDay 63One or more of the following: * danger signs or severe malaria in the presence of parasitaemia on any day between day 4 and day 63 in patients who did not previously meet any of the criteria of early treatment failure; * presence of parasitaemia on any day between day 4 and day 63 with temperature ≥ 37.5 ºC (or history of fever) in patients who did not previously meet any of the criteria of early treatment failure
Proportion of patients classified as Late Parasitological FailuresDay 63Presence of parasitaemia on any day between day 7 and day 63 with temperature \< 37.5 ºC in patients who did not previously meet any of the criteria of early treatment failure or late clinical failure
Frequency of adverse and serious adverse eventsDay 63

Countries

Vietnam

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026