Last Updated: 03/12/2018

Phase II Efficacy Study of Artefenomel & Piperaquine in Adults & Children With P. Falciparum Malaria

Objectives

The clinical development of a single encounter treatment for uncomplicated malaria has the potential to significantly improve the effectiveness of antimalarials. Exploratory data suggested that the combination of artefenomel and piperaquine phosphate (PQP) has the potential to achieve satisfactory cure rates as a single dose therapy.

The primary objective of the study was to determine whether a single dose of artefenomel (800 mg) plus PQP in ascending doses is an efficacious treatment for uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria in the ‘target’ population of children ≤ 5 years of age in Africa as well as Asian patients of all ages.

Rationale and Abstract

A randomised, double-blind single-dose (loose combination) study in the target patient population of children > 0.5 years and <= 5 years of age in Africa and patients of all ages in Asia (> 0.5 years and <= 70 years) with uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria was done. Patients > 5 years in Africa were also to be recruited in a safety age step down procedure. The underlying assumption was that children of 5 years or less in Africa and all ages in Asia will have a higher probability of having lower immunity and hence potentially require higher drug exposure to achieve efficacy and hence the study aimed to recruit 60-80% African children < = 5 years and 18-36% Asian patients (defined as the target population) and approximately 10% African patients >5 years,

Three OZ439/PQP treatment arms were to be included for patients >= 35 kg (800mg OZ439 in loose combination with PQP doses of either 640, 960, 1440 mg). Doses were scaled for patients < 35kg based on the weight to achieve similar exposures in patients >= 35kg.

The study was to test for futility and dose arms were to be dropped if the probability was >30% that PCR-adjusted ACPR at Day 28 (ACPR28) was less than 90% (the target efficacy for the study was >= 95% ACPR28). Only data from patients in Asia patients and Africa patients < 5 years were to be included in the Interim analysis, although all patients were to be included in the final analysis. Interim analyses were to occur after recruitment of approximately 50 evaluable patients per dose cohort and thereafter approximately after every 25 patients.

In a separate process, the safety of OZ439/PQP treatment arms was to be assessed at scheduled time points by an ISMB and adults and children were included through progressive step-down in age range following safety evaluation

Following Screening and informed consent, patients were to receive study drug and were to be followed for clinical signs of malaria (parasitaemia and temperature), safety assessments and pharmacokinetics up to Day 42 following dosing (Day 63 at selected sites).

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02083380

Study Design
Study Type  : Interventional  (Clinical Trial)
Allocation: Randomized
Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment
Masking: Quadruple (Participant, Care Provider, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)
Primary Purpose: Treatment
Project Outputs

BMC Med. 2017

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