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Assessing Human-to-Mosquito Transmission in Volunteers Participating in Malaria Vaccine Candidate Trials in Mali

Completed
Conditions
Malaria
Registration Number
NCT02206451
Lead Sponsor
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Brief Summary

Background:

- Malaria is a disease that affects many people in Mali and in Africa. It is caused by germs that are spread by mosquito bites. Researchers are creating vaccines that they hope will prevent malaria infection and/or the spread of it.

Objective:

- To test if the PfSPZ vaccine can stop malaria spread by mosquitoes.

Eligibility:

- People currently enrolled in the ongoing PfSPZ malaria vaccine trial. Participants must be willing to have uninfected mosquitoes bite them.

Design:

* Participants will be able to take part in this study at every visit after receiving all scheduled vaccinations.

* Participants will be asked whether they are willing to participate in the procedures. Female participants will have a pregnancy test.

* Researchers will put about 60 mosquitoes in 2 or 3 cups (20 or 30 in each cup). They will hold each cup to the participant s leg or arm so the mosquitoes can bite. These mosquitoes do not carry germs and will take about 3 drops of blood total.

* Participants will get a cream for any swelling or itching.

* Participants will be checked the next day for any discomfort.

* Participants may take part in this feeding test multiple times, if they are willing.

* If participants have malaria parasites in their blood, they may be asked to take part in another study. For this, they will sleep alone in their hut the night after the feeding test. A study team will set up nets to collect mosquitoes that may have bitten the participant overnight.

Detailed Description

A vaccine which interrupts malaria transmission (VIMT) is a critical tool to achieve the ultimate goal of eradication of this disease. VIMTs work by inducing humoral responses in vaccinated individuals that inhibit the development of malaria parasites in the mosquito, and combined humoral and cellular responses that inhibit the establishment of infection in humans. Overall efficacy of these vaccines is evaluated by measuring reduction of infection and clinical cases among vaccinees and the parasite infectivity to mosquitoes, (human-to-mosquito transmissibility), before and after vaccination, and with or without vaccination. One of the candidate VIMTs, the PfSPZ Vaccine, is currently being tested in Mali for safety, tolerance, and immunogenicity.

The objective of this Feeding Assay Protocol is to explore the effect of the PfSPZ Vaccine, on interrupting human-to-mosquito transmission. Individuals from the the PfSPZ Vaccine trial in 2014 who also consent to be enrolled in this Feeding Assay Protocol will be eligible to participate in procedures including direct skin feeds (DSF) and experimental huts (EH). The human-to-mosquito transmission will be evaluated by examining the presence of malaria parasites in the midgut of mosquitoes fed on study participants. The human-to-mosquito transmission by DSF and EH assay methods will be analyzed for potential correlation.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
87
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Measurement of infection/infectivity incidences1 year
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Measurement of infection intensity for a given mosquito that was fed on a given subject1 year

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Malaria Research and Training Center

🇲🇱

Bamako, Mali

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