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Severe Malaria in Remote Areas- Closing the Evidence Gap
Sponsor: Tropical Diseases Research Centre, Zambia
Summary
The goal of this observational study is to assess whether the giving of rectal artesunate and a three day course of an Artemisinin based Combination Therapy (ACT) to children aged 6 months and ≤ 5 years with severe malaria when referral is not feasible is non inferior to giving of injectable artesunate and three day course of an ACT. The three primary objectives are: * To evaluate the 28-day PCR corrected cure rate in children aged 6 months to ≤ 5 years treated with RAS+ACT or RAS+injectable artesunate, assessing whether each treatment achieves the clinically acceptable cure rate of 97% ± 5%. * To evaluate feasibility of provision of rapid treatment of severe malaria with rectal artesunate in children 6 months to ≤ 5 years not able to access a referral health facility, by a community health worker or in health facility where there is no injectable artesunate available. * To evaluate the impact of reinforcing the integrated Community Case Management (iCCM) on access to the formal health care system The study is being done in Nchelenge district in Zambia and Kapolowe district in the Democratic Republic of Congo. It will enrol 1008 children with severe malaria and an equal number of children with simple malaria
Official title: Severe Malaria Treatment With Rectal Artesunate and Artemisinin-based Combination Therapy in Remote Settings
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
6 Months - 5 Years
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
2016
Start Date
2024-03-10
Completion Date
2027-04
Last Updated
2026-01-27
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Treatment of severe malaria with either RAS + ACT or RAS + injectable artesunate + ACT will each achieve the clinically acceptable cure rate of 97% ± 5% in remote areas
The Community Health Worker will give rectal artesunate (RAS) +artemisinin based combination Therapy (ACT) to children aged 6 months to less than or equal to 5 years who fail to make the referral trip. Those who make the referral trip will receive injectable artesunate and artemisinin based Combination Therapy for three days. Giving of RAS +ACT is unique to this study. Children with non malaria severe disease will also receive amoxicillin from the community health worker before they are referred to the next level of care
Locations (2)
University of Kinshasa
Kinshasa, Kinshasa City, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Tropical Diseases Research Centre
Ndola, Copperbelt, Zambia