Understanding and maximising the community impact of seasonal malaria chemoprevention in Burkina Faso (INDIE-SMC): study protocol for a cluster randomised evaluation trial
Marta Moreno, Aissata Barry, Markus Gmeiner, Jean Baptist Yaro, Samuel S Sermé, Isabel Byrne, Jordache Ramjith, Alphonse Ouedraogo, Issiaka Soulama, Lynn Grignard, Seyi Soremekun, Simon Koele, Rob ter Heine, Amidou Z Ouedraogo, Jean Sawadogo, Edith Sanogo, Issa N Ouedraogo

TL;DR
This study in Burkina Faso evaluates how seasonal malaria chemoprevention impacts malaria in children under 5 and under 10 years old.
Contribution
The study introduces a cluster randomized trial to assess SMC effectiveness with and without direct observation in different age groups.
Findings
The trial will measure parasite prevalence and clinical incidence in three intervention groups.
It will evaluate factors like drug adherence and resistance markers affecting SMC outcomes.
Abstract
Seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC) involves repeated administrations of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine plus amodiaquine to children below the age of 5 years during the peak transmission season in areas of seasonal malaria transmission. While highly impactful in reducing Plasmodium falciparum malaria burden in controlled research settings, the impact of SMC on infection prevalence is moderate in real-life settings. It remains unclear what drives this efficacy decay. Recently, the WHO widened the scope for SMC to target all vulnerable populations. The Ministry of Health (MoH) in Burkina Faso is considering extending SMC to children below 10 years old. We aim to assess the impact of SMC on clinical incidence and parasite prevalence and quantify the human infectious reservoir for malaria in this population. We will perform a cluster randomised trial in Saponé Health District, Burkina Faso,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMalaria Research and Control · Mosquito-borne diseases and control
