Safe and efficacious artemisinin-based combination treatments for African pregnant women with malaria: a multicentre randomized control trial

Jan 17, 2015Reproductive health

Safe and effective artemisinin-based malaria treatments for pregnant African women: a large clinical trial

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Abstract

A Phase 3 clinical trial is assessing the safety and efficacy of four antimalarial treatments in pregnant women across four African countries.

  • Pregnant women diagnosed with malaria are randomized to receive one of four treatments: amodiaquine-artesunate, dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine, artemether-lumefantrine, or mefloquine-artesunate.
  • The primary endpoint is treatment failure adjusted for genetic testing at 63 days post-treatment, alongside safety profiles.
  • Secondary endpoints include unadjusted treatment failure, changes in hemoglobin, placenta malaria, and birth weight metrics.
  • The trial's multicentre design aims to enhance the applicability of results across diverse populations in sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Exclusion of HIV-positive pregnant women on antiretroviral therapy may limit the findings regarding potential drug interactions.

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