Last Updated: 17/02/2016

Electrocardiographic safety evaluation of monthly dihydroartemisin-piperaquine for the use in mass treatment campaigns to block malaria transmission in Lihir island, Papua New Guinea

Objectives

The proposed project is a pharmacovigilance study for electrocardiographic safety evaluation of monthly DHA/PPQ (administered as a conventional 3-day course repeated monthly for 3 months). The investigators aim to assess the safety of the drug to be used monthly in mass treatment campaigns.

Principal Investigators / Focal Persons

Oriol Mitja

Rationale and Abstract

Mass drug administration with antimalarial treatment is a tool that can potentially reduce or totally eliminate malaria parasite infections from a population. Dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DHA/PPQ) given monthly for 3 months to the entire population might be a good candidate for mass drug administration because the long acting PPQ exerts a long post-treatment prophylactic effect against reinfection and relapse. The use of a repeated dose of DHA/PPQ could lead to increased PPQ plasma concentrations and increased cardiotoxicity. However, there is no data on a second course of treatment or on safety of the drug administered in repeated monthly doses.

 

Study Design

Study Type : Interventional  (Clinical Trial)
Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment
Masking: None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose: Treatment

Date

Dec 2014 — Dec 2015

Project Site

Papua New Guinea

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