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This study is a human challenge study to assess the feasibility and safety of controlled human malaria infection (via P. vivax sporozites) in healthy volunteers, and to develop a bank of P. vivax-infected blood for use in future controlled human P. vivax malaria infection studies. Additional objectives are to obtain data on host immune response to P. vivax infection and pre-treatment gametocytaemia.
This study is funded by the UK Wellcome Trust. The grant reference number are Oxford/MORU: 212336/Z/18/Z and 212336/Z/18/A, and Mahidol University: 212336/A/18/Z and 212336/A/18/A.
Full description
Six healthy, malaria-naïve Thai adults, aged between 20 and 55 years will be recruited at the Clinical Therapeutics Unit (CTU) in the Hospital for Tropical Medicine, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University, Bangkok. The overall period of participation will be 15 months: a 3-month screening process prior to the Day 0 challenge, followed by 1 year after challenge. All inclusion and exclusion criteria will be checked to ensure eligibility criteria have been met prior to Day 0.
Volunteers will be admitted as inpatients to the CTU on Day -1 ( a day prior to the challenge day). Challenge (bites from 5 infected mosquitoes) will be administered at the Insectarium unit, Department of Entomology, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University. The infected mosquitoes will be prepared by the Malaria Vivax Research unit (MVRU, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University). Following successful feeding by the infectious mosquitoes, volunteers will be monitored daily as inpatients for parasitemia and clinical presentation of malaria infection (Days 1-5).
Beginning on Day 6, volunteers will be assessed twice a day and, at a timepoint that will depend upon the level of parasitaemia and/or degree of the volunteer's symptoms, up to 250 mL of blood will be drawn and then antimalarial treatment will be prescribed. The standard malaria radical cure according to Thai national guideline will be chloroquine, followed by a 2-week course of direct observed oral primaquine (PQ). Upon confirmation of clinical recovery, completion of chloroquine treatment and laboratory absence of infection, volunteers will be discharged and followed daily as outpatients through completion of oral primoquine therapy.
After completion of antimalarial therapy, all volunteers will continue to be followed for 1 year after Day 0:
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6 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Jetsumon Sattabongkot Prachumsri, Ph.D; Nicholas Day, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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