ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Male Circumcision (MC) Using the ShangRing™ Device in Malawi

F

FHI 360

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 1

Conditions

Male Circumcision

Treatments

Device: ShangRing

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02309710
595330-3

Details and patient eligibility

About

This prospective study will evaluate the safety and acceptability of the ShangRing device for medical male circumcision (MMC) during routine service delivery in Namitete, Malawi

Full description

Although voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) was adopted as a prevention strategy in 2011, MMC prevalence in Malawi is low with estimates between 2 and 20%. The 5-year national VMMC target for Malawi is 80% of men ages 15 - 49, or more than two million procedures. Since 2011, only 42,700 VMMCs have been done for HIV prevention, about 2% of the target. Of the 29 healthcare districts in Malawi, only a minority are supported by non-governmental (NGO) and U.S. government-funded VMMC programs. Major obstacles include few VMMC service-delivery points; few trained service providers; poor availability of prepackaged disposable VMMC kits requiring re-use of instruments and supplies; few organized campaigns or community mobilization programs; and drop-in services only.

Scale-up of adult MMC services in Malawi could be accelerated by the availability of simplified, bloodless methods. Methods of MMC using devices may also increase safety, efficiency and acceptability. Although many devices are available and widely used for infant circumcision, fewer devices exist for use in adult male circumcision and there are limited data on device use in adults. Small-scale safety studies, randomized controlled trials (RCTs), and field demonstration studies are required before the safety, effectiveness, acceptability, and feasibility of any device is assured.

Several devices have recently been developed that have the potential to simplify and shorten both training time and surgical duration by eliminating the need for suturing and hemostasis as well as allow for task-shifting to lower-level cadres of healthcare providers (i.e. non-physician), thereby reducing the strain on healthcare systems by having more healthcare workers available to provide MMC services. One such device is the ShangRing.

In the WHO framework, smaller bridging studies are recommended to address additional questions about particular sub-populations and specific conditions of use (WHO 2011). This research study will assess the safety and acceptability of the ShangRing within the context of routine service delivery in Namitete, Malawi. The investigators will enroll 500 HIV-uninfected adult men aged 18 to 49 years voluntarily seeking medical male circumcision. The men will be scheduled for two follow-up visits at 7 and 42 days after ShangRing placement for device removal and a healing check, respectively. Results from this study will inform the Malawi Ministry of Health (MOH) as it decides on the integration of MMC devices into its national VMMC program.

Enrollment

500 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18 to 49 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Must be aged 18 to 49 years;
  • Must be HIV-uninfected per same-day routine HIV testing and counseling (HTC) at the clinic;
  • Must be uncircumcised (on examination);
  • Must be in good general health, at the discretion of the clinician;
  • Must be free of genital ulcerations or other visible signs of sexually transmitted infections(STI) on examination;
  • Must be able to understand study procedures, and agree to abide by them including the follow-up visit schedule;
  • Must be able to communicate in English or Chichewa;
  • Must freely consent to participate in the study, be available for follow-up visits, and sign a written informed consent form (ICF); and
  • Must provide full contact information including cell phone number, address, and other locator information

Exclusion criteria

  • Has an anatomic abnormality (e.g. phimosis or hypospadias) that contraindicates ShangRing MMC;
  • Takes a medication that would be a contraindication for elective surgery, such as an anticoagulant or steroid;
  • Has a self-reported medical condition that would be a contraindication for elective surgery, e.g. hemophilia, extreme obesity, poorly controlled diabetes, sickle cell anemia;
  • Has a self-reported allergy or sensitivity to lidocaine or other local anesthesia; or
  • Is not available to be circumcised on the same day as screening.

Trial design

500 participants in 1 patient group

ShangRing
Experimental group
Description:
ShangRing administered to men seeking medical male circumcision
Treatment:
Device: ShangRing

Trial contacts and locations

2

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems