As efforts to control malaria are stalling, and the disease is particularly severe in children under the age of two, it is imperative for countries in sub-Saharan Africa, with areas of moderate-to-high transmissions, to implement Intermittent Preventive Treatment in infants (IPTi) delivered through the Expanded Program on Immunization (EPI), which is the only feasible, sustainable and cost-effective strategy to reach this high-risk group. IPTi is a full therapeutic course of antimalarial medicine (with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, SP) delivered to infants in the context of routine immunisation services during the first year of life, when they are at high risk for exposure.
IPTi has been shown to be safe, efficacious in reducing clinical malaria, anaemia and hospital admissions, and to be highly cost-effective; for all these reasons, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends it for malaria prevention in infants. However, IPTi has not been implemented to date, except in Sierra Leone.
MULTIPLY is a large-scale implementation project, which includes public and private European and African institutions which aims to maximise the delivery and uptake of IPTi, to achieve the full potential and effectiveness of this intervention. Research partners from Mozambique, Sierra Leone and Togo in selected country districts will conduct implementation of IPTi at health facilities and EPI mobile-outreach clinics using a paediatric dispersible formulation of SP, alongside routine vaccinations and vitamin A supplementation. Children will receive up to a maximum of 6 doses of IPTi in the first two years of life.
Through this implementation, capacity will be built and fundamental programmatic issues to achieving effectiveness will be assessed, including:
- IPTi operational feasibility and acceptability;
- impact on health services integration, i.e. on EPI immunisations and vitamin A administration coverage;
- the cost and cost-effectiveness of IPTi delivery including through the outreach EPI platform;
- the impact on malaria incidence, anaemia, overall mortality, SP resistance development and the safety of the intervention.
The integration of IPTi with EPI contacts, together with social and behaviour change communication campaigns to inform communities of the importance of EPI, and the malaria protection afforded by IPTi delivered at the EPI, could lead to an increased demand for EPI.
MULTIPLY is a 40-month project funded by The European & Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP) aiming to:
- Build capacity and establish an environment to support transition to Ministries of Health for scale-up and sustainable IPTi in project countries
- Generate and disseminate knowledge to the WHO and Ministries of Health of project countries to inform recommendations and guidance for IPTi delivery, integrated within national Maternal, New-born and Child Health (MNCH), National Malaria Control Program (NMCP), Nutrition and EPI policy and/or guidelines.
- Strengthen South-South and South-North networks to fight poverty-related diseases such as malaria.