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    Effect of 3 Days of Oral Azithromycin on Young Children With Acute Diarrhea in Low-Resource Settings: A Randomized Clinical Trial.

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    Author
    Ahmed, Tahmeed
    Chisti, Mohammod Jobayer
    Rahman, Muhammad Waliur
    Alam, Tahmina
    Ahmed, Dilruba
    Parvin, Irin
    Kabir, Md Farhad
    Sazawal, Sunil
    Dhingra, Pratibha
    Dutta, Arup
    Deb, Saikat
    Chouhan, Aishwarya
    Sharma, Anil Kumar
    Jaiswal, Vijay Kumar
    Dhingra, Usha
    Walson, Judd L
    Singa, Benson O
    Pavlinac, Patricia B
    McGrath, Christine J
    Nyabinda, Churchil
    Deichsel, Emily L
    Anyango, Maurine
    Kariuki, Kevin Mwangi
    Rwigi, Doreen
    Tornberg-Belanger, Stephanie N
    Kotloff, Karen L
    Sow, Samba O
    Tapia, Milagritos D
    Haidara, Fadima Cheick
    Mehta, Ashka
    Coulibaly, Flanon
    Badji, Henry
    Permala-Booth, Jasnehta
    Tennant, Sharon M
    Malle, Dramane
    Bar-Zeev, Naor
    Dube, Queen
    Freyne, Bridget
    Cunliffe, Nigel
    Ndeketa, Latif
    Witte, Desiree
    Ndamala, Chifundo
    Cornick, Jennifer
    Qamar, Farah Naz
    Yousafzai, Mohammad Tahir
    Qureshi, Shahida
    Shakoor, Sadia
    Thobani, Rozina
    Hotwani, Aneeta
    Kabir, Furqan
    Mohammed, Jan
    Manji, Karim
    Duggan, Christopher P
    Kisenge, Rodrick
    Sudfeld, Christopher R
    Kibwana, Upendo
    Somji, Sarah
    Bakari, Mohamed
    Msemwa, Cecylia
    Samma, Abraham
    Bahl, Rajiv
    De Costa, Ayesha
    Simon, Jonathon
    Ashorn, Per
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    Date
    2021-12-01
    Journal
    JAMA Network Open
    Publisher
    American Medical Association
    Type
    Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    See at
    https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.36726
    Abstract
    Importance: World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines do not recommend routine antibiotic use for children with acute watery diarrhea. However, recent studies suggest that a significant proportion of such episodes have a bacterial cause and are associated with mortality and growth impairment, especially among children at high risk of diarrhea-associated mortality. Expanding antibiotic use among dehydrated or undernourished children may reduce diarrhea-associated mortality and improve growth. Objective: To determine whether the addition of azithromycin to standard case management of acute nonbloody watery diarrhea for children aged 2 to 23 months who are dehydrated or undernourished could reduce mortality and improve linear growth. Design, setting, and participants: The Antibiotics for Children with Diarrhea (ABCD) trial was a multicountry, randomized, double-blind, clinical trial among 8266 high-risk children aged 2 to 23 months presenting with acute nonbloody diarrhea. Participants were recruited between July 1, 2017, and July 10, 2019, from 36 outpatient hospital departments or community health centers in a mixture of urban and rural settings in Bangladesh, India, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Pakistan, and Tanzania. Each participant was followed up for 180 days. Primary analysis included all randomized participants by intention to treat. Interventions: Enrolled children were randomly assigned to receive either oral azithromycin, 10 mg/kg, or placebo once daily for 3 days in addition to standard WHO case management protocols for the management of acute watery diarrhea. Main outcomes and measures: Primary outcomes included all-cause mortality up to 180 days after enrollment and linear growth faltering 90 days after enrollment. Results: A total of 8266 children (4463 boys [54.0%]; mean [SD] age, 11.6 [5.3] months) were randomized. A total of 20 of 4133 children in the azithromycin group (0.5%) and 28 of 4135 children in the placebo group (0.7%) died (relative risk, 0.72; 95% CI, 0.40-1.27). The mean (SD) change in length-for-age z scores 90 days after enrollment was -0.16 (0.59) in the azithromycin group and -0.19 (0.60) in the placebo group (risk difference, 0.03; 95% CI, 0.01-0.06). Overall mortality was much lower than anticipated, and the trial was stopped for futility at the prespecified interim analysis. Conclusions and relevance: The study did not detect a survival benefit for children from the addition of azithromycin to standard WHO case management of acute watery diarrhea in low-resource settings. There was a small reduction in linear growth faltering in the azithromycin group, although the magnitude of this effect was not likely to be clinically significant. In low-resource settings, expansion of antibiotic use is not warranted. Adherence to current WHO case management protocols for watery diarrhea remains appropriate and should be encouraged.
    Identifier to cite or link to this item
    http://hdl.handle.net/10713/17550
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.36726
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