GoldBamboo.com - Knowledge is strong medicine
  

Chloroquine and Amodiaquine for Treatment of Malaria in Children. - Article


  Not Signed In - Sign In / Register


Get Your Free Credit Report Right Now!

Zip Code:






Chloroquine Injection

Aralen Injection 




Clinical Trial: Chloroquine and Amodiaquine for Treatment of Malaria in Children.

This study is no longer recruiting patients.

Sponsored by: Bandim Health Project
Information provided by: Bandim Health Project
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00137514

Purpose

This study will evaluate the efficacy of the treatment recommended by the National Malaria Programme in Guinea-Bissau as compared to a higher dose of chloroquine and to an other anti-malarial drug, amodiaquine. The genetic basis of the parasites for developing resistance will be examined. Children coming to Bandim Health Centre with symptoms of malaria and a positive malaria test will be included. The children will be visited and malaria films obtained weekly until day 35. In case of reappearance of parasites the child will be re-treated with sulfadoxine/pyrimethamine.
Condition Intervention Phase
Malaria, Falciparum
 Drug: Drug: chloroquine and amodiaquine
Phase IV

MedlinePlus related topics:  Malaria

Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Treatment, Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, Parallel Assignment, Efficacy Study

Official Title: Chloroquine and Amodiaquine for Treatment of Symptomatic Children with Plasmodium Malaria in Guinea-Bissau.

Further Study Details: 
Primary Outcomes: Parasite reappearance rate; hospitalization during follow-up
Secondary Outcomes: genetic markers in parasites; recrudescense rate; re-infection rate
Expected Total Enrollment:  720

Study start: March 2001;  Study completion: December 2005
Last follow-up: May 2004;  Data entry closure: October 2005

This study compares treatment of uncomplicated malaria in children in Guinea-Bissau as recommended by the national malaria programme (chloroquine in a total dose of 25 mg/kg), either with a total dose of 50 mg/kg chloroquine or with a total dose of 15 or 30 mg of amodiaquine. As both annual in vitro studies (from 1992 to 2004 except 1998, 1999) and several in-vivo studies from Guinea-Bissau indicate a fairly stable chloroquine resistance prevalence, another aim of this study is to evaluate the genetic basis of chloroquine resistance in Guinea-Bissau by analyzing specific single nucleotide polymorphisms in pfcrt and pfmdr1 in blood samples from this in vivo trial.

Following consent to participate, children visiting the Bandim Health Centre on the outskirts of Bissau with mono-infection with Plasmodium falciparum are by block-randomization allocated to one of the four different treatment groups. The treatment is given supervised by one of the health workers. The children are visited and malaria films obtained on day 2 and day 7 and then once weekly until day 35. On day seven, 100 microliter of capillary blood are drawn for analyses of chloroquine or amodiaquine concentrations in whole blood. Whenever a child has recurrent parasitaemia, a filter-paper blood-sample is collected for later PCR analysis.

If parasites reappear in 50% or more of at least 40 children in one of the treatment groups this treatment arm should be terminated. During the study parents are recommended to bring the child to Bandim Health Centre in case of any illness. Participating children will be examined and treated free of charge Following the recommendations of the national Malaria Programme sulfadoxine/pyrimethamine will be used for re-treatment of children in case of recrudescence,

The results from this study could be used when giving the needed new recommendations for treatment of malaria in Guinea-Bissau. If still effective mono-therapy with a higher dose of chloroquine could be used until the introduction of a better treatment is possible. When artemisinine combination therapy is going to be introduced in Guinea-Bissau the results could be helpful in deciding if amodiaquine should be considered as the partner drug – and in which dose.

Eligibility

Ages Eligible for Study:  up to  15 Years,  Genders Eligible for Study:  Both
Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Patients < 15 years presenting af Bandim Health Centre symptoms suggestive of malaria at least 20 P.falciparum parasites per 200 leukocytes in a thick film lives in Bandim (to enable follow-up) -

Exclusion Criteria:

Sevelely ill children considered needing the services of a hospital by the medical doctor in charge stated medication with other antimalarials within one week prior to treatment previous idiosyncrastic reactions to any of the study drugs

-

Location Information


Guinea-Bissau, Bissau
      Bandim Health Project, Apartado 861,  Bissau,  Guinea-Bissau

Study chairs or principal investigators

Peter Aaby,  Study Director,  Bandim Health Project   

More Information

Study ID Numbers:  PSB-2001-chl-amo; 2004-126 (SAREC).
Last Updated:  September 12, 2005
Record first received:  August 28, 2005
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:  NCT00137514
Health Authority: Guinea-Bissau: Ministry of Health
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-09-13

Resources



[ Disclaimer: The information on GoldBamboo for any particular treatment, medicine, drug, or herbal product might be missing or incomplete, and should never be used as a single source of knowledge. GoldBamboo generally has links to authoritative sites displayed toward the bottom of each topic page under the heading "Resources". ]

Take control over your directory listings...INSTANTLY

Every day, thousands of users find businesses like yours in the GoldBamboo directory.

Limited Time Offer!!!

For only $30 a year, a savings of 70% off our standard rate:

  • Edit your listing (whenever you want!)
  • Link to your website
  • Choose which categories you are listed in
  • Describe your services

The process will take only a few minutes and consists of 3 easy steps:

1. Register     >     2. Edit Listings     >     3. Publish

Your Company
your street
yourtown, YS 12345
888-888-8888



No Thanks

Popular Treatments

Acne Treatment ADHD Treatment Allergy Treatment Alzheimer's Treatment
Anemia Treatment Arthritis Treatment Asthma Treatment Bipolar Disorder Treatment
Bird Flu Treatment Bladder Cancer Treatment Bladder Control Treatment Blood Pressure Treatment
Brain Tumor Treatment Breast Cancer Treatment Bronchitis Treatment Cancer Treatment
Cancer Alternative Treatment Cataract Treatment Cirrhosis Treatment Colitis Treatment
Colon Cancer Treatment Common Cold Treatment Conjunctivitis Treatment Constipation Treatment
Crohn's Disease Treatment Cystic Fibrosis Treatment Depression Treatment Dermatitis Treatment
Diabetes Treatment Edema Treatment Epilepsy Treatment Erectile Dysfunction Treatment
Fibromyalgia Treatment GERD Treatment Glaucoma Treatment Gout Treatment
Hay Fever Treatment Headache Treatment Heart Disease Treatment Hepatitis Treatment
High Blood Pressure Treatment High Cholesterol Treatment Hives Treatment Hypertension Treatment
Hypoglycemia Treatment IBS Treatment Impotence Treatment Indigestion Treatment
Infertility Treatment Influenza Treatment Insomnia Treatment Lactose Intolerance Treatment
Leukemia Treatment Lung Cancer Treatment Lyme Disease Treatment Macular Degeneration Treatment
Menopause Treatment Migraine Treatment Osteoarthritis Treatment Osteoporosis Treatment
Pancreatic Cancer Treatment PMS Treatment Pneumonia Treatment Prostate Diseases Treatment
Restless Leg Treatment Rheumatoid Arthritis Treatment Sepsis Treatment Sinusitis Treatment
Skin Cancer Treatment Sleep Apnea Treatment Snoring Treatment Stroke Treatment
Testicular Cancer Treatment
GoldBambooTM

Your Integrative Health and Wellness Resource for Chloroquine Injection.

December 2, 2009



Page Updated: June 1, 2005
============== Advertisement ==============
Disclaimer: All material displayed on the GoldBamboo.com website is provided for educational purposes only. Consult a physician regarding the applicability of any information found on GoldBamboo.com to your symptoms or medical condition.

Home | About Us | Link To Us | Feedback | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Health Forums

Copyright © 2004-2009 - Anaconda Partners LLC - All rights reserved.

HONcode accreditation seal.

We comply with the HONcode standard for health trust worthy information:
verify here.