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Background:
Malaria is a serious infection caused by a parasite. People get malaria when an infected mosquito bites them. Malaria can cause major health and social problems in places were malaria is common, such as Africa but can also affect travelers who have never been exposed to malaria. Researchers at the NIH want to find a safe and effective malaria vaccine, antimalarial drugs, or prevention regimen. To do this, healthy volunteers are recruited under a general screening study in order to see if are qualified to join a future malaria study.
Objective:
To screen healthy volunteers to see if they are eligible to join investigational malaria studies. The studies will be trials of investigational antimalarial drugs, malaria vaccines, or prevention regimens. They may also involve controlled human malaria infection trials.
Eligibility:
Healthy people ages 18 50
Design:
Participants will first be prescreened by phone.
Participants will be screened with:
Medical history
Physical exam
Blood and urine tests
Participants may go more than 1 year without joining a clinical trial. If this happens, they may be re-contacted to see if they still want to be part of this screening protocol. Those who still want to participate and have had relevant medical changes will be rescreened.
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Full description
This is a screening protocol for healthy volunteers to participate in research studies conducted by Laboratory of Malaria Immunology and Vaccinology (LMIV).
Malaria-related morbidity and mortality have a major economic impact in endemic regions and
present a substantial health risk to non-immune travelers and people living in endemic areas. To stem the worldwide impact of this devastating disease, a safe and broadly effective malaria vaccine and improved antimalarial therapeutics are urgently required.
This screening protocol is designed to continuously evaluate potential healthy volunteers to build a pool of volunteers who may participate in future and ongoing LMIV malaria drug, vaccine, or controlled human malaria infections (CHMI) trials. A complete medical history and blood and urine samples will be obtained to evaluate whether volunteers are eligible for study-specific screening.
Enrollment
Sex
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Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
All of the following criteria must be fulfilled for a subject to participate in this trial:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
A subject will be excluded from participating in this trial if any one of the following criteria is fulfilled:
Pregnant, breastfeeding, or planned pregnancy in the upcoming year.
Hemoglobin, white blood cell (WBC), platelets, alanine transaminase (ALT), and creatinine (Cr) outside of local lab normal range (subjects may be included at the investigator's discretion for "not clinically significant" values outside of normal range).
Anticipated use during the study period, or use within the following periods prior to enrollment:
History of:
Clinically significant medical condition, physical examination findings, other clinically significant abnormal laboratory results, or past medical history that may have clinically significant implications for current health status and participation in the study in the opinion of the Investigator. A clinically significant condition or process includes but is not limited to:
History of or known active cardiac disease including:
Infection with HIV, hepatitis B, and/or hepatitis C
Psychiatric condition that precludes compliance with the protocol including but not limited to:
Suspected or known current alcohol or drug abuse as defined by the American Psychiatric Association in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition at the discretion of the PI
Any other finding that, in the judgment of the Investigator, would interfere with, or serve as a contraindication to, protocol adherence, assessment of safety or reactogenicity, or a subject's ability to give informed consent, or increase the risk of having an adverse outcome from participating in the study
1,500 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
David M Cook, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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