Amoxicillin Versus Benzyl Penicillin for Treatment of Children Hospitalised With Severe Pneumonia
- Registration Number
- NCT01399723
- Lead Sponsor
- KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Collaborative Research Program
- Brief Summary
This study seeks to determine whether clinical outcome following initial treatment of severe pneumonia with oral amoxicillin is as effective as the current standard benzyl penicillin. The study will also provide an estimate of the proportion of Kenyan children with severe pneumonia who fail treatment with a single antibiotic.
- Detailed Description
Case management for the treatment of childhood acute respiratory infections has been widely promoted in many developing countries for over 20 years. Despite this, pneumonia continues to claim over 1.5 million lives of children under five annually. The use of affordable, easily-administered, safe, effective treatments can potentially reduce the burden of childhood pneumonia. The WHO recommends the use of a single antibiotic for the treatment of severe pneumonia. Whereas in Asia, evidence from large randomized clinical trials has changed policy recommendations for treatment of severe pneumonia from parenteral penicillin to oral amoxicillin, there is little evidence to inform a similar move in African children where pneumonia is associated with poorer outcomes. In this study the investigators will investigate effectiveness of oral amoxicillin versus the current standard treatment, benzyl penicillin in severe childhood pneumonia using a randomized controlled non-inferiority design preceded by a pilot pre-intervention phase. The investigators will also collect observational data HIV-exposed / infected children with severe pneumonia. 594 children aged 2 - 59 months admitted with clinical signs of severe pneumonia to up to 7 hospitals in Kenya will be randomly assigned to receive either oral amoxicillin or injectable benzyl penicillin. They will then be followed up for the primary outcome of pre-defined treatment failure at 48 hours. The results of this trial will provide valuable data on the effectiveness of oral amoxicillin in the treatment of severe pneumonia in a population of Kenyan children and determine the practicability of conducting large pragmatic trials on pneumonia in Africa similar to those done in Asia.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 561
- Clinical signs of WHO-defined severe pneumonia
- Age 2 months to 59 months
- Clinical signs of WHO-defined very severe pneumonia
- Clinical or laboratory diagnosis of meningitis
- Clinical diagnosis of severe malnutrition (marasmus/kwashiorkor)
- Clinical or laboratory diagnosis of severe anaemia requiring transfusion
- HIV-exposure on rapid HIV antibody test (only observational data will be collected from these patients)
- Elimination of signs of severe pneumonia in a child with wheeze after outpatient bronchodilator therapy
- Chronic condition that may underlie or contribute to a presentation with respiratory distress such as: known chronic renal or cardiac disease, presence of cerebral palsy predisposing child to aspiration/hypostatic pneumonia
- Established bronchiectasis or congenital abnormality of the lower respiratory tract
- Upper airway obstruction producing stridor
- Admission from outpatient clinic specifically for treatment of TB
- Referral from another inpatient facility following treatment with injectable antibiotics for more than 24 hours or because the initial regimen is considered to have failed
- Documented history of >48hours treatment with oral amoxicillin
- Failure to obtain informed consent
- Penicillin allergy
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Benzyl Penicillin 50,000IU/kg 6 hourly Benzyl penicillin - Amoxicillin 45mg/kg 12 hourly Amoxicillin -
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Treatment Failure at 48 Hours (Two Full Days After Enrollment) 48 hours Development of any signs of very severe pneumonia at any time Hypoxemia defined as SpO2 \<85% or \<80% for altitude \< or ≥1500m respectively measured after minimum of 3 minutes on ambient air Persistent vomiting (occurring within 30 minutes of administration of amoxicillin with failure to retain drug after 3 successive attempts at administration) at any time Clinical diagnosis of new bacterial co-morbid condition requiring revision of antibiotic treatment at any time Lower chest wall indrawing Temperature ≥38◦C Respiratory rate ≥5bpm of admission rate if above age-adjusted normal upper limit
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Treatment Failure at or Before Discharge / Day 5 Post Enrollment (Whichever Occurs First) Patients will be followed up from the day of hospitalisation (day 0) until the day of medical discharge (average duration of 3 days) or until day 5 of hospitalisation (whichever occurs first). Treatment failure as defined in the primary outcome measure.
Readmission With Diagnosis of Severe or Very Severe Pneumonia Within 14 Days of Enrollment Day 0 to Day 14 Death at or Before Five Days Following Enrollment Day 0 to Day 5 Death defined as: in-hospital death occurring at any time after randomisation (recruitment for HIV-exposed participants) or verbal report of death of the enrolled patient from parent/guardian communicated either directly or via telephone conversation.
Outcome (Death/Readmission) at 14 Days as Determined by Telephone or Direct Interview Day 14 Definition of death as described in third secondary outcome measure.
Trial Locations
- Locations (6)
New Nyanza Provincial General Hospital
🇰🇪Kisumu, Nyanza, Kenya
Kisumu East District Hospital
🇰🇪Kisumu, Nyanza, Kenya
Kerugoya District Hospital
🇰🇪Kerugoya, Central, Kenya
Embu Provincial General Hospital
🇰🇪Embu, Eastern, Kenya
Mbagathi District Hospital
🇰🇪Nairobi, Kenya
Bungoma District Hospital
🇰🇪Bungoma, Western, Kenya