Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
2424 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-06-18
2023-11-20
Brief Summary
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A pragmatic randomized control diagnostic trial will be conducted from October 2020 until March 1 2022 in pregnant mothers at sites in Ethiopia. Both symptomatic and asymptomatic first and early second trimester pregnant women will be included in the study and individually randomized to either standard of care or enhanced cased detection arms using LAMP for malaria. Women (n=2583) will be enrolled during a seven-month period encompassing the peak transmission seasons and then followed until delivery. In the standard of care arm, venous blood sample will be collected from each study participant and the presence of Plasmodium infection will be diagnosed by microscopy in symptomatic patients. Pregnant women who test positive for malaria will be referred and treated for malaria with quinine or artemisinin combination therapies (ACTs) as per national guidelines. In the intervention arm, mothers who are symptomatic or asymptomatic will be tested by a commercially available CE-approved LAMP malaria test and microscopy/RDT for malaria at each clinic visit and treated if positive by any test. Pregnant mothers who require treatment will be referred and treated with either quinine or artemisinin combination therapy (ACTs) as per national guidelines. The primary outcome is the proportion of deliveries with low birth weight based on WHO definition, with secondary outcomes of:(i)absolute birth weight; (ii) maternal hemoglobin;(ii) neonatal hemoglobin at birth;(iv) neonatal mortality; (v) stillbirth; and (vi) prematurity in each arm of the study.
Detailed Description
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OBJECTIVES
General objective To assess the impact of LAMP in the diagnosis of malaria in pregnancy and its potential role in reducing mortality and morbidity attributable to malaria. We hypothesize that the additional sensitivity of LAMP coupled with active case detection in detecting malaria in pregnancy will result in additional cases being identified and treated.
Specific objectives
1. To evaluate the impact of LAMP versus microscopy/RDT for the detection of malaria in pregnant mothers in terms maternal and infant morbidity and mortality.
2. To evaluate the impact of enhanced case detection of malaria in pregnancy by screening asymptomatic mothers at each antenatal visit until delivery.
3. To determine the impact of treating LAMP-positive asymptomatic and symptomatic pregnant women as compared to standard of care. Treatment is per national guidelines.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Study area The study will be conducted at sites across several sites in Ethiopia to obtain sufficient enrolment and spanning different transmission settings based on epidemiological data provided by the Federal Ministry of Health. The study sites are in the Amhara region (Chisabay Health center, Hamusit health center and Andasa Health center), and in the Jimma area (Bonga (GebreTsadik Shawo) General hospital, Uffa health center and Lare health center). In Ethiopia, malaria is characterized by its seasonality where the peak transmission season is from October to December with a second peak in June. P. falciparum and P. vivax are the predominant species in the area.
Study design and period
The study is a prospective diagnostic study of malaria in pregnant women. The goal is to determine whether: (i) LAMP provides a clinically measurable benefit compared to current first line diagnostic test of Giemsa-stained microscopy and whether (ii) enhanced case detection of asymptomatic mothers with LAMP has added value in terms of outcomes. We hypothesize that addition of LAMP to one arm will be of greater benefit than microscopy alone due to additional LAMP sensitivity. We further hypothesize that enhanced case detection by screening asymptomatic mothers at each antenatal visit will be of additional value in treating malaria. Both symptomatic and asymptomatic first and second trimester mothers will be included in the study and individually randomized to one of two arms: standard of care or enhanced cased detection arms using LAMP for malaria. Mothers will be enrolled during a seven-month period from June 2021 to January 2022 and then followed until 28 days after delivery. Given the rate of pregnant mothers at the locations, we anticipate that the required minimum of 2583 mothers will be enrolled in the study during the study period. In the first standard of care arm, venous blood sample will be collected from each study participant and the presence of Plasmodium infection will be diagnosed by microscopy in symptomatic patients. Pregnant women who test positive for malaria will be referred and treated for malaria with quinine or ACTs as per national guidelines. In the second (test) arm, mothers whether symptomatic or asymptomatic will be tested by a commercially available CE-approved LAMP malaria test (Human Diagnostics LoopAMP (Wiesbaden, Germany)) at each clinic visit in addition to RDT/microscopy. The commercial LAMP tests can distinguish P. falciparum and P. vivax and treatment will be given according to national guidelines. The purpose of doing all tests in the intervention arm is to determine how many additional cases LAMP identified. The primary outcome is the proportion of deliveries with low birth weight, with secondary outcomes of: (i) absolute birth weight; (ii) maternal hemoglobin; (ii) neonatal hemoglobin at birth (Standard Hgb testing from peripheral blood or finger prick); (iv) neonatal mortality; (v) pregnancy loss; and (vi) prematurity in each of the two arms.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
DIAGNOSTIC
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Standard of care
One third of individuals get allocated to the standard of care arm. At each antenatal visit as per Ethiopian guidelines, pregnant women enrolled in the study will be submitted to the standard of care for malaria in pregnancy. If the pregnant mothers are symptomatic for malaria, they receive microscopy (blood smear for Plasmodium detection) and then are treated with anti-malarial therapy if microscopy is positive for Plasmodium. If it is negative they receive no treatment. If they are asymptomatic, they do not receive any further investigations or treatment in relation to malaria.
Microscopy/RDT
Standard of care management of malaria in pregnancy relies on microscopy and/or RDT for diagnosis
Intervention arm
The remaining two-thirds of participants will be actively screened (symptomatic and asymptomatic) for Plasmodium infection at each antenatal visit, using both LAMP and conventional techniques (microscopy and RDT). If either is positive, participants will be treated with antimalarial therapy according to Ethiopian Ministry of Health guidelines. If both are negative then they receive no treatment.
LAMP
LAMP testing involves taking a blood specimen using venous puncture, extracting DNA and performing a commercial CE-marked LAMP malaria assay to obtain a malaria result (presence/absence of parasite DNA) at the species level
Microscopy/RDT
Standard of care management of malaria in pregnancy relies on microscopy and/or RDT for diagnosis
Interventions
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LAMP
LAMP testing involves taking a blood specimen using venous puncture, extracting DNA and performing a commercial CE-marked LAMP malaria assay to obtain a malaria result (presence/absence of parasite DNA) at the species level
Microscopy/RDT
Standard of care management of malaria in pregnancy relies on microscopy and/or RDT for diagnosis
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Consent to the study
Exclusion Criteria
* Multiparity
* Severe malaria at inclusion as per WHO criteria
* At risk pregnancy as per Ethiopian guidelines
* Impossibility to date pregnancy
18 Years
FEMALE
Yes
Sponsors
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Jimma University
OTHER
Amhara Public Health Institute, Ethiopia
UNKNOWN
Armauer Hansen Research Institute, Ethiopia
OTHER
University of Calgary
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Dylan R Pillai
Professor
Principal Investigators
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Dylan Pillai, MD, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Calgary
Locations
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University of Calgary
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Amhara Public Health Institute
Bahir Dar, Amhara, Ethiopia
Tropical & Infectious Diseases Research Center (TIDRC), Jimma University
Jimma, Oromiya, Ethiopia
Armauer Hansen Research Institute, Ethiopia
Addis Ababa, , Ethiopia
Countries
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References
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Gebresenbet RF, Kamaliddin C, Bekele ZM, Teferi M, Tegegne B, Yewhalaw D, Bayih AG, Pillai DR; LAMPREG Study Group. Active case detection and treatment of malaria in pregnancy using LAMP technology (LAMPREG): a pragmatic randomised diagnostic outcomes trial-study protocol. BMJ Open. 2022 Jul 18;12(7):e058397. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058397.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol
Document Type: Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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REB17-1335
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id