PARIST study protocol: a phase I/II randomised, controlled clinical trial to assess the feasibility, safety and effectiveness of paracetamol in resolving acute kidney injury in children with severe malaria

BackgroundAcute kidney injury (AKI) has in the past been considered a rare complication of malaria in children living in high-transmission settings. More recently, however, a growing number of paediatric case series of AKI in severe malaria studies in African children have been published (Artesunate...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMJ open 2023-07, Vol.13 (7), p.e068260-e068260
Hauptverfasser: Paasi, George, Okalebo, Charles Benard, Ongodia, Paul, Namayanja, Cate, Eregu, Egiru Emma Isaiah, Abongo, Grace, Olupot, Moses, Amorut, Denis, Muhindo, Rita, Okiror, William, Ndila, Carolyne, Olupot-Olupot, Peter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BackgroundAcute kidney injury (AKI) has in the past been considered a rare complication of malaria in children living in high-transmission settings. More recently, however, a growing number of paediatric case series of AKI in severe malaria studies in African children have been published (Artesunate vs Quinine in the Treatment of Severe P. falciparum Malaria in African children and Fluids Expansion as Supportive Therapy trials). The Paracetamol for Acute Renal Injury in Severe Malaria Trial (PARIST) therefore, aims to assess feasibility, safety and determine the effective dose of paracetamol, which attenuates nephrotoxicity of haemoproteins, red-cell free haemoglobin and myoglobin in children with haemoglobinuric severe malaria.MethodsPARIST is a phase I/II unblinded randomised controlled trial of 40 children aged >6 months and 20 mg/dL. Children will be randomly allocated on a 1:1 basis to paracetamol intervention dose arm (20 mg/kg orally 6-hourly for 48 hours) or to a control arm to receive standard of care for temperature control (ie, tepid sponging for 30 min if fever persists give rescue treatment). Primary outcome is renal recovery at 48 hours as indicated by stoppage of progression and decrease of Cr level below baseline, BUN (
ISSN:2044-6055
2044-6055
DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2022-068260