Mosquito-killing drug reduced malaria episodes by a fifth among children
First evidence that repeated mass administration of ivermectin can reduce malaria incidence in children aged five or younger without an increase in adverse events for the wider population given the drug.
Childhood malaria episodes could be reduced by 20% during malaria transmission season, if the whole population were given ivermectin, a drug used to treat parasite infections, every three weeks.
This is according to the first randomised trial of its kind of 2,700 people including 590 children from eight villages in Burkina Faso, published in The Lancet.
In addition, repeated mass administration of ivermectin showed no obvious drug-related harms among fellow villagers taking the drug.
Since 2000, deaths from malaria have dropped by 48% around the world and there are fewer endemic regions, but progress is stalling due to growing resistance to artemisinin; the drug that has been integral to that success.
Ivermectin is used to treat parasite infections from river blindness and scabies to head lice. It is regularly distributed in mass drug administrations for the control of neglected tropical diseases.
Previous studies have shown it kills mosquitoes when they ingest ivermectin-treated human or animal blood, but none have looked at its effect on clinical malaria incidence.
Study author, Dr Brian D Foy of Colorado State University, USA, says:
“Ivermectin reduces new cases of malaria by making a person’s blood lethal to the mosquitoes who bite them, killing mosquitoes and therefore reducing the likelihood of infection of others. Because ivermectin has a unique mode of action compared to other malaria control insecticides and antimalarial drugs, it could be used alongside drugs that treat malaria to combat residual transmission of the disease.”
The study authors set out to test the safety and efficacy of repeated mass ivermectin administration to control malaria during an 18-week trial during the 2015 rainy season. The research looked at children as they have the highest disease burden in hyperendemic communities because of their underdeveloped immunity.
They invited eight villages to participate and four were assigned to each group. The intervention group had 1,447 participants including 327 children, and the control group 1,265 including 263 children.
All eligible residents received a single dose of ivermectin plus a dose of albendazole – an anti-worm medication. The intervention group received five further three-weekly doses of ivermectin alone, reaching 70-75% mass drug administration coverage.
In the villages, children aged five or younger were tested for malaria every two weeks and treated if needed. In the intervention group 648 malaria episodes occurred in 327 children, and the control group saw 647 among 263 children.
Malaria episodes per child in the study villages were reduced by 20% in the intervention group compared to the control — from 2.49 to 2 cases per child — without any obvious drug-related harms to the population.
More than double the amount of children in the intervention group had no malaria episodes, compared with children in the control group.
Adverse reactions such as vomiting, pruritus, oedema in the limbs were recorded in 3% of the intervention group and 2% of the control group. There were similar levels of adverse reactions in the children 6 in the intervention group and 5% in the control group.
“Because of mosquitoes’ ability to adapt to control tools, new methods of preventing the transmission of malaria are needed, in particular those that target residual transmission. Ivermectin is well tolerated and widely used so it could be a useful tool in disease reduction if further trials show similar results.” Continues Dr Foy.
The authors note that the villages selected had been studied previously and regularly treated with ivermectin and albendazole in the years before this study. In addition, their sample size is relatively small, and it was not possible to administer a placebo meaning participants and study teams knew who was and was not receiving treatment.
The researchers aimed to mitigate this by assigning each nurse to work in one intervention group village and one control group village to control for nurse effects, and the field physician constantly monitored their work.
The researchers suggest there could be bias in the self-reporting of adverse events because villagers knew which group they were in. They note that there were more events reported in the intervention group, but none were drug related and very few were classified as serious adverse events.
These results are the first proof of principal of antimalarial effects of ivermectin and further work is required to test dosing and distribution approaches. The team call for further trials, in particular double-blinded trials from other endemic areas to test the drug against different malaria ecologies.
Studies are also needed to examine the suspected direct antimalarial effects of repeated ivermectin treatment in infected humans. The authors also call for more safety studies in large populations.
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