Optimizing Malaria Treatment for HIV-Malaria Co-infected Individuals

Last updated: January 4, 2023
Sponsor: Makerere University
Overall Status: Active - Recruiting

Phase

4

Condition

Hiv Infections

Treatment

N/A

Clinical Study ID

NCT04708496
PK25
  • Ages > 18
  • All Genders

Study Summary

Optimal is a Randomized clinical trial to optimize treatment of malaria in HIV -malaria co infected patients. It has been demonstrated that, when the antimalarial drug Artemether Lumefantrine is co administered with Efavirenz based ART in HIV-malaria co-infected individuals, sub therapeutic levels of the drug are achieved hence resulting in poor malaria treatment outcomes.

The study then hypothesizes that, : HIV-malaria co-infected individuals receiving efavirenz-based ART plus a double-dose or 5-day course of artemether-lumefantrine will achieve higher and adequate artemether-lumefantrine serum concentrations with adequate 42-day treatment outcomes compared to individuals with HIV-malaria co-infection receiving efavirenz-based ART plus a standard-dose of artemether-lumefantrine.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Written informed consent
  2. Willing and able to comply with study treatment and procedures
  3. Age above 18 years
  4. Confirmed HIV positive and receiving efavirenz or dolutegravir based ART forobjectives 3 and 4
  5. Confirmed Malaria blood film positive without evidence for severe malaria forobjectives 3 and 4
  6. Confirmed Malaria blood film negative for objectives 1 and 2

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Serum alanine transaminase levels above 3x upper limit of normal
  2. Serum creatinine levels above 2x upper limit of normal
  3. Use of known inducers/inhibitors of CYP or glucuronyl transferase UGT1A1 within past 2months (e.g. anticonvulsants, TB medications, HIV agents for prophylaxis, azoleantifungals)
  4. Pregnant women or female subjects who are unwilling to use a suitable contraceptivemethod for the duration of the study (condom, diaphragm, IUD or contraceptive implant)
  5. Likely to be poorly adherent based on clinician's medical judgement
  6. Known to be current injection drug user
  7. Administration of any additional antimalarial drugs that are not study drugs within 24hours before study enrollment and during the course of the study.
  8. Presence of any non-malarial febrile illness which may interfere with theclassification of malaria treatment outcome
  9. Movement away from the study area interfering with follow-up assessment
  10. Patients with contraindications to taking the study drugs
  11. Evidence of QT prolongation on ECG (rate adjusted QT interval>45ms (men (or >470ms forwomen

Study Design

Total Participants: 888
Study Start date:
January 18, 2021
Estimated Completion Date:
March 31, 2024

Study Description

Malaria and HIV have significant interactions at various levels. The geographical and epidemiological overlap increases risk for co-infection and co-treatment. The immune suppression due to HIV increases malaria incidence, severity and risk for poor treatment outcomes including mortality and adverse pregnancy outcomes such as anemia and low birth weight. Malaria infection increases HIV viral replication. Both malaria and HIV are treated with combination therapy to enhance treatment outcomes and reduce risk for development of resistance, consequently creating potential for drug-drug interactions (DDIs) when the two diseases are treated concomitantly. Previous studies demonstrated significant reduction in systemic exposure to Artemether, its metabolite dihydroartemisinin, and the long acting partner drug lumefantrine when the ACT artemether-lumefantrine was co-administered with efavirenz-based ART to HIV-malaria co-infected individuals.

Exposure to sub therapeutic antimalarial drug concentrations poses a risk for poor malaria treatment outcomes such as prolonged morbidity, anemia, death and poor birth outcomes for pregnant women plus increased economic costs and risk for drug resistance. There are currently limited drug options available for both malaria and HIV treatment especially in sub-Saharan Africa, thus the need to protect drug effectiveness. There are very scanty data on effects of drug interactions on malaria clinical outcomes, and such studies would be unethical currently. Despite these gaps, co-administration of antimalarial and antiretroviral drugs occurs with no guidance on therapeutic interventions to overcome these deleterious effects. Data are therefore urgently needed to optimize treatment of malaria for HIV-malaria co-infected individuals.

General Objective: To utilize innovative interventions to overcome drug interactions between artemether-lumefantrine and efavirenz to guide malaria treatment for individuals co-infected with HIV and malaria.

Specific objectives:

Objectives

  1. To determine the safety and Pharmacokinetics of the double dose artemether-lumefantrine when administered to healthy volunteers (malaria negative and HIV negative individuals).

  2. To determine the safety and Pharmacokinetics of the 5-day course of artemether-lumefantrine when administered to healthy volunteers (malaria negative and HIV negative individuals).

  3. To determine the safety, pharmacokinetics and malaria treatment outcome of a standard dose of artemether-lumefantrine compared to double of the standard dose for weight and a 5-day course of artemether-lumefantrine for treatment of uncomplicated malaria among HIV-Malaria co-infected individuals receiving efavirenz (400mg) based ART.

  4. To determine the safety and Pharmacokinetics of artemether-lumefantrine when administered with Dolutegravir based ART among HIV-malaria co-infected individuals.

Connect with a study center

  • Infectious Diseases Institute

    Kampala,
    Uganda

    Completed

  • Tororo District Hospital

    Tororo, P.O Box 1
    Uganda

    Active - Recruiting

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