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Evaluation of Anti-venoms Serum in Africa (ESAA)

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Pasteur Institute

Status

Completed

Conditions

Antivenins
Snake Venoms
Snake Bites

Treatments

Drug: Antivenom serum Inoserp Pan-Africa® injection

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT03326492
2016-092

Details and patient eligibility

About

There is little or no assessment under real-use conditions of the efficacy and the tolerance in the short, medium and long term of the antivenoms currently on the market and used in the treatment of snake bites.

The main objective is to assess the short term tolerance (< 2 hours post-injection) of the antivenom Inoserp Pan-Africa® (temporary market authorization) from Inosan laboratory currently available in Cameroon.

Full description

Globally, the number of annual envenomings is estimated to be between 420,000 and 1,800,000. In sub-Saharan Africa, the annual number of envenomings is estimated at 315,000, leading to more than 9,000 amputations and about 7,000 deaths.

Snake bites are recognized by many authors as a neglected disease, whose incidence is underestimated or even unknown in several countries of sub-Saharan Africa. Few data are currently available on the morbidity, mortality and economic impact of snake bites.

In Cameroon and particularly in the northern part of the country, where the density of snakes is high, a few studies have been carried out. In 2002, the annual incidence of envenomings was estimated at 200/100 000 inhabitants, of which 85% was due to Echis ocellatus, and the lethality was 23.9% in some centers. The Ministry of Public Health introduced snake bites in 2015 as a priority health problem in the list of diseases being monitored. Thus, a national epidemiological surveillance system, with a weekly count of snake bites, has been implemented. In the first year, the incidence of annual snake bites was 11.4/100,000 inhabitants, representing more than 2,500 bites per year, including 43 deaths and a case fatality rate of up to 6% in some areas. The northern region (Adamaoua, North and Far North regions) (savanna and mixed zone) accounts for 40% of the country's burden and 77% of the deadly burden, while the forest zone accounts for 32% of the burden Morbid disease and 16% of the fatal burden (ministerial source). The monitoring is based on paper registers for bite reporting, supplemented by the sending of pharmacovigilance data by text messages, but this is very little used in current practice. The data collection system in Cameroon could therefore be improved in terms of both completeness and speed of centralizing data.

These estimates are likely to be well below the reality given the non-exhaustive nature of the data collection and the frequent use of traditional practitioners without referral in a hospital structure.

In recent years, FAV-Afrique® produced by Sanofi-Pasteur was the treatment of reference for venomous snake bites in West and Central Africa. It was the most evaluated and the most effective, reducing by a factor 5 to 10 the mortality. This anti-venom serum was polyspecific, containing an antivenom against ten species of snakes: Naja melanoleuca, nigricollis & haje; Dendroaspis polylepis, viridis & jamesoni, Bitis gabonica & arietans; Echis leucogaster & ocellatus.

However, Sanofi-Pasteur stopped production (last batch produced in January 2014 and expired in June 2016), making it necessary to use other snake antivenoms. Since the end of 2015, two new antivenoms are available in Cameroon where they are granted a provisional marketing authorization. Few clinical trials have evaluated the antivenoms currently available in Africa.

Some clinical efficacy and safety data have been published for Inoserp Pan-Africa®. However, the number of subjects was limited and assessment was limited to the period of hospitalization.

The lack of sufficient data on incidence and mortality associated with snake bites, the current weakness of the epidemiological data collection system and the presence on the market of antivenoms that are very little evaluated in terms of tolerance, effectiveness make action necessary.

The main objective of the study is therefore to assess the tolerance and the efficacy of the antivenom Inoserp Pan-Africa® from Inosan laboratory currently available in Cameroon.This study will be conducted under routine conditions in order to avoid bias in the results through the implementation of dedicated logistics which would not be representative of the usual conditions.

Enrollment

474 patients

Sex

All

Ages

5+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Any patient over 5 years old (inclusive) visiting at a participating center for a snake bite with or without confirmed envenoming
  • Informed consent to research

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient refusal
  • Under 5 year-old
  • Antivenom serum administration before the arrival in the participating center
  • History of severe allergic reactions to antivenom serum

Trial design

474 participants in 1 patient group

Patients bitten by a snake
Description:
Any patient over 5 years old going to a participating center for curative care following a snake bite. Participation to the study does not change usual follow-up of patients. Antivenom serum Inoserp Pan-Africa® injection will be decided according to the clinical evaluation of the patient.
Treatment:
Drug: Antivenom serum Inoserp Pan-Africa® injection

Trial contacts and locations

13

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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