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COMPLETED
NCT05874271
NA

Short Course Primaquine for the Radical Cure of P. Vivax - Papua New Guinea

Sponsor: Macfarlane Burnet Institute for Medical Research and Public Health Ltd

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Significant gains have been made in reducing the overall burden of malaria worldwide, however these have been far greater for Plasmodium falciparum than P. vivax. P. vivax remains a major obstacle to malaria control and elimination efforts, largely due to its ability to form dormant liver stages (hypnozoites) that allows it to escape detection and treatment. Importantly, they are susceptible only to 8 aminoquinolines such as primaquine. However, primaquine is associated with risk of haemolysis in individuals with a genetic condition, called glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency. Additionally, the recommended 14-day prolonged treatment regimen is associated with poor treatment adherence, hence ineffective primaquine treatment. Innovative solutions to the radical cure of both the blood and liver stages of P. vivax are urgently required. The PNG National Department of Health has requested a pragmatic study of the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of implementing point-of-care G6PD testing followed by high-dose, short-course primaquine treatment regimens for patients with P. vivax malaria. This revised case management is to be combined with practicable enhancements to patient education, supervision, malariometric surveillance and pharmacovigilance. This will be a before-after longitudinal health facility-based study implemented at Napapar and Mugil health centres and Baro and Wirui clinics. A staged approach for the implementation of the revised case management strategy will be used, including patient education and counselling, community-based clinical review, with mixed methods evaluation.

Official title: Feasibility of High Daily Dose Short Course Primaquine After G6PD Testing for the Radical Cure of Plasmodium Vivax Malaria

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

12 Months - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

794

Start Date

2023-08-07

Completion Date

2025-10-25

Last Updated

2026-06-18

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

COMBINATION_PRODUCT

Revised case management package

1. Point-of-care quantitative G6PD testing using G6PD STANDARD (SD Biosensor) prior to use of primaquine (Day 0) 2. Prescription of short course primaquine (7 mg/kg total) (Day 0): * PQ7 (1 mg/kg/day for 7 days) if G6PD activity greater than 70 percent * PQ14 (0.5 mg/kg/day for 14 days) if G6PD activity is 30-70 percent * PQ8w (0.75 mg/kg/week for 8 weeks) if G6DP activity less than 30 percent 3. Participant counselling at the health facility (Day 0): * Supervision of first dose of primaquine * Education regarding importance and risks of primaquine therapy and necessity to take primaquine with food 4. Community based clinical review on Day 3 (and Day 7 for the first 300 participants) to detect and manage gastrointestinal or haemolytic adverse effects of treatment and encourage adherence to full treatment regime 5. Improved malariometric surveillance and pharmacovigilance to support wider scale use of the revised case management

Locations (4)

Napapar Health Centre

Kokopo, East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea

Wirui Clinic

Wewak, East Sepik Province, Papua New Guinea

Mugil Health Centre

Madang, Madang Province, Papua New Guinea

Baro Clinic

Vanimo, Sandaun Province, Papua New Guinea