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Efficacy Study of Community-Based Treatment of Serious Bacterial Infections in Young Infants
This study is ongoing, but not recruiting participants.
Study NCT00189384   Information provided by Aga Khan University
First Received: September 12, 2005   Last Updated: September 7, 2006   History of Changes

September 12, 2005
September 7, 2006
November 2003
 
The primary outcome of success rate will be defined as patient cured or improved with the regimen assigned to, on day 7 of therapy.
Same as current
Complete list of historical versions of study NCT00189384 on ClinicalTrials.gov Archive Site
  • Completion rates
  • Adverse events
  • Relapse rates
Same as current
 
Efficacy Study of Community-Based Treatment of Serious Bacterial Infections in Young Infants
Randomized Controlled Trial of Intramuscular Ceftriaxone Versus Procaine Penicillin Versus Cotrimoxazole and Gentamicin for Management of Serious Bacterial Infections in Young Infants in Community Settings

Approximately one-third of neonatal deaths in developing countries are due to infections acquired through the birth canal and/or exposure to an unclean environment soon after birth. Current World Health Organization recommendations for the management of infants younger than 2 months of age who have serious bacterial infections involve hospitalization and parenteral therapy for at least 10 days with antibiotic regimens containing penicillin or ampicillin combined with an aminoglycoside.However, in many settings throughout the developing world, this is not currently possible, nor is this standard of care likely to be feasible in the near future. Several studies have reported that for a variety of sociocultural reasons many families are unable or unwilling to access hospital-based care and their sick young infants do not get hospitalized, and instead, receive a variety of home-based antibiotic therapies, or none at all. In our community field sites, approximately 70% of families refuse hospital referral for a sick newborn, despite provision of transport.

Thus, there is an urgent need to define the role of community/first-level facility-based care versus hospitalization for the management of young infants with serious bacterial infections, and the potential for community-based parenteral antibiotics as an alternative strategy in resource poor areas with high neonatal mortality rates. Bang and colleagues have demonstrated significant reductions in neonatal mortality from infections in an underdeveloped rural district in Maharashtra, India by a field-based case management approach which used oral cotrimoxazole and intramuscular gentamicin given for 7 days as treatment for neonates with sepsis.

This study is an equivalence randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing once daily IM ceftriaxone injection to once daily IM procaine penicillin and gentamicin injection, to once daily intramuscular gentamicin injection and twice daily oral cotrimoxazole, given for 7 days in babies with clinically-diagnosed possible serious bacterial infection (pneumonia, or sepsis with or without local infections such as skin or umbilical infections) whose families refused referral to a hospital. After supplementary informed consent, patients meeting specific inclusion and exclusion criteria are randomly allocated to one of the three regimens being tested. The study hypothesis is that all 3 regimens will perform equally well in the treatment of sepsis in a first-level facility setting.

 
Phase III
Interventional
Treatment, Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, Single Group Assignment
  • Bacterial Infection
  • Sepsis
  • Infant, Newborn
Drug: ceftriaxone, procaine penicillin and gentamicin, oral cotrimoxazole and gentamicin
 

*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by National Clinical Trials Identifier (NCT ID) in Medline.
 
Active, not recruiting
426
December 2005
 

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Age 0-59 days presenting to Young Infant community study site
  • Clinical diagnosis of possible serious bacterial infection by study physician according to specified clinical criteria
  • Parents refuse to accept referral care and sign (or thumb imprint) document stating this.
  • Parents consent to community centre-based intramuscular antibiotic injections

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Age over 59 days
  • Presence of severe jaundice diagnosed clinically or by laboratory investigation (bilirubin > 12 g/dl in term and > 7 in pre-term baby).
  • Presence of obvious meningitis (bulging fontanelle, observed seizures)
  • Patient previously enrolled in antibiotic therapy trial
  • Parents accept hospital referral
  • Parents do not consent to any injectable therapy
Both
up to 59 Days
No
Contact information is only displayed when the study is recruiting subjects
Pakistan
 
NCT00189384
 
SC/SNL 11150-0902-50001-269
Aga Khan University
 
Principal Investigator: Anita KM Zaidi, MBBS, SM Department of Pediatrics, Aga Khan University
Aga Khan University
September 2006

ICMJE     Data element required by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and the World Health Organization ICTRP