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Targeted Active Case Detection Among High Risk Populations in Southern Lao Peoples Democratic Republic

Assessing the Effectiveness of Targeted Active Case Detection Among High Risk Populations in Southern Lao PDR

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03783299
Enrollment
39968
Registered
2018-12-21
Start date
2017-11-28
Completion date
2018-12-31
Last updated
2021-02-23

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

Conditions

Plasmodium Falciparum Malaria

Brief summary

This study assesses the effectiveness of targeted active case detection among high-risk populations in Southern Lao Peoples Democratic Republic (PDR). The investigators hypothesize that active case detection using the next generation of HRP-2 rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) can help bridge gaps in identification of high-risk asymptomatic individuals with low density parasitemia, allowing for targeting of this reservoir and thereby reducing transmission. The investigators hypothesize that active case detection (testing and treating positive cases) with these RDTs will lead to a reduction in P. falciparum transmission.

Detailed description

This study is the second phase of work in Champasak Province, Southern Lao PDR, building off a formative phase of work that characterized the demographics, occupations, migratory patterns, health-seeking behaviors, and social networks of mobile and migrant populations (MMPs) in four target districts. This phase of the study now aims to determine the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, acceptability, and feasibility of proactive targeted test-and-treat activities using high-sensitivity malaria rapid diagnostic tests (HS-RDTs) for reducing Plasmodium falciparum malaria transmission in Champasak Province among (1) village residents and (2) mobile and migrant populations (MMPs) and other high-risk populations (HRPs). The study will specifically assess the role of HS-RDTs, a diagnostic test that offers potentially \ 10-fold greater sensitivity than standard RDTs, in active case detection at both the village-level and in forest-going HRPs for decreasing prevalence and incidence of P. falciparum in target areas. The effectiveness of these interventions will be compared independently and in combination against areas with no study interventions (standard of care) over the course of implementation (planned for October 2017 - November 2018). The two main study interventions are mass test and treat (MTAT) using HS-RDTs in village-based populations, and peer navigator (PN) led focal test and treat (FTAT) using HS-RDTs in forest based HRPs. Primary outcomes will include PCR-based P. falciparum prevalence at endline. Following a baseline cross-sectional survey in November-December 2017, the interventions will consist of 3 rounds of MTAT spaced throughout the year, with potential to reduce to 2 based upon initial prevalence estimates, and ongoing FTAT by PNs among forest and forest-fringe HRPs, with the primary evaluation to be conducted through an end-line cross-sectional survey in November 2018.

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTStandard RDT and HS-RDT

All household members (residents and temporary visitors) aged 18 months and older will be invited to participate in an RDT and blood collection component. After consenting, the MTAT team will capture axillary temperature, and test each individual using both a standard RDT (SD Bioline Pf/Pv RDT) and HS-RDT (SD Bioline Malaria Ag P.f High Sensitive Cat# 05FK140)

DRUGArtemether-lumefantrine

If found positive by standard RDT or HS-RDT, treatment will be administered, and women of reproductive age will be assessed as outlined in the protocol. All individuals who have provided informed consent, test positive by either HS-RDT or standard RDT, are ≥18 months old, are not pregnant or breastfeeding, and who do not have symptoms associated with severe malaria or another severe illness, will be offered an age-appropriate course of AL (age-specific blister packages) and SLD-PQ according to national treatment guidelines.

If found positive by standard RDT or HS-RDT, treatment will be administered, and women of reproductive age will be assessed as outlined in the protocol. All individuals who have provided informed consent, test positive by either HS-RDT or standard RDT, are ≥18 months old, are not pregnant or breastfeeding, and who do not have symptoms associated with severe malaria or another severe illness, will be offered an age-appropriate course of AL (age-specific blister packages) and SLD-PQ according to national treatment guidelines.

Sponsors

Center for Malariology, Parasitology, and Entomology
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
The National Institute of Public Health
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
Health Poverty Action
CollaboratorOTHER
University of California, San Francisco
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
FACTORIAL
Primary purpose
SCREENING
Masking
NONE

Intervention model description

The study is employing a split-plot community-randomized controlled trial design, with peer navigator test and treat randomized at the health center catchment level, and village-based test and treat randomized at the village level within health center catchment areas (HCCA).

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Months to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

Village Based MTAT Inclusion Criteria * All household members 18 months of age and older. * Study participants include those in the 14 selected health center catchment areas within the four target districts in Champasak Province, Southern Lao PDR; Moulapamook, Panthampone, Sanamsaboun, and Soukhuma. * Members of households who have provided informed consent will be included for blood samples collection and treatment for identified malaria cases if meeting the appropriate criteria.

Exclusion criteria

* Household members less than 18 months of age will be excluded. * Any individuals under the age of 18 months will be excluded from RDT testing and blood collection. Peer Naviagtor-Led FTAT Inclusion Criteria * All persons 15 years and older who have spent at least one night outside a formal village in the past one month. * Individuals must be 18 years and older and willing and able to provide consent to be included in the peer navigator or study staff focus group discussions and key informant interviews * Study participants include those in the 14 selected health center catchment areas within the four target districts in Champasak Province, Southern Lao PDR; Moulapamook, Panthampone, Sanamsaboun, and Soukhuma * High-risk populations in forested areas, rice field regions, plantations and any informal settlements * Individuals travelling into the HCCA who are willing and sufficiently able to communicate with PNs to assess their eligibility

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Community-level PCR-based P. falciparum prevalence in sampled villages4 monthsThis is defined as the proportion of individuals \>18 months old with P. falciparum infection (detected by PCR) out of all individuals \>18 months tested within the 2017 and 2018 surveys.The effectiveness of the interventions will be assessed as P. falciparum prevalence via PCR at end-line (post only) using generalized linear mixed effects models with separate random intercepts to allow for clustering within villages and health center catchments. The binomial distribution will be used to analyze prevalence outcomes (logistic regression)
HS-RDT-based test positivity rate in village-based and forest-based samples6 monthsThis is defined as the proportion of all individuals tested by HS-RDT at each round of the MTAT interventions or during routine FTAT, with a positive HS-RDT, among the population older than 18 months.The HS-RDT and RDT test positivity rates will be estimated for the MTAT villages during each intervention round. This will be done as soon as data on RDT and HS-RDT results are available, which would be expected to be one month following each round. Differences in prevalence measures at each round will be assessed using a χ2 test, as well as logistic regression models to account for potential confounding factors.
Village-based population coverage of test and treat interventions3 monthsThis indicator will be measured in two ways for each round of village MTAT. Operational program coverage is defined as the proportion of individuals ≥18 months old and households visited and offered the MTAT interventions within the target areas. Effective program coverage is defined as the proportion of individuals (≥18 months old) that agreed to participate in the MTAT intervention among all individuals ≥18 months old eligible to participate in the intervention in the target population
Community-level confirmed P. falciparum malaria parasite incidence1 yearThis is defined as the number of total and confirmed outpatient (OPD) malaria confirmed and suspected cases per person per year for each village, as ascertained from the health facility registers, utilizing village population size estimates for the exposure denominator. Data pertaining to this outcome will be analyzed on an intention-to-treat basis. Monthly counts of confirmed malaria cases from the health facility registers will be linked to villages and analyzed in a time series Poisson or negative binomial model with random intercepts at the health center catchment and village levels.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Cost and cost effectiveness12 monthsFor the costing portion of the study, the cost per case investigation conducted, cost per additional positive case identified using FTAT in village- and forest-based HRPs, and the cost per case actively detected per person screened during screen and treat. The cost-effectiveness of screen and treat will also be compared between village-based activities and peer-navigator led testing.
Sensitivity and specificity of HS-RDTs6 monthsThe P. falciparum prevalence from all individuals tested with HS-RDTs will be compared with parallel results from standard RDTs (all field testing activities) and to subsequent PCR-based testing (cross-sectional survey, FTAT and MTAT subset). In the latter case, the PCR-based result will serve as the gold standard for all comparisons. Sensitivity and specificity and receiver operating curve (ROC) analyses will be conducted to assess the performance of the HS-RDTs in field situations, and in the presence of mixed-species infections. DBS will be collected for cross-sectional survey, FTAT and MTAT.
Serology2 monthsSeropositivity to a panel of standard malaria parasite antigens for P. falciparum and P. vivax (including merozoite surface protein-1 (MSP-1) and apical membrane antigen-1 (AMA-1), will be used to examine both recent and medium-term exposures. These data will also be mapped used captured global positioning system (GPS) coordinates to examine serological hotspots. Finally, novel antigens will also be used to further explore any differences in parasite exposure between study arms. Vector exposure may also be explored using antigens to anopheline salivary proteins.

Countries

Laos

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 1, 2026