Topical Coconut Oil Application and Incidence of Sepsis in Neonates
- Conditions
- Late-Onset Neonatal Sepsis
- Interventions
- Other: Coconut oil
- Registration Number
- NCT04842786
- Lead Sponsor
- Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati
- Brief Summary
The randomized control trial aims to determine the effect of twice daily application of a commonly used coconut oil to the skin of neonates in the neonatal intensive care setting on the rate of late onset sepsis versus a no treatment control.
- Detailed Description
Purpose and Specific Aims
The purpose is to determine the effect of twice daily topical coconut oil application on late onset sepsis in neonates admitted to the Neonatal Intensive Care Units of Indira Gandhi Institute of Child Health, Cloudnine Hospital at Old Airport Road, and Cloudnine Hospital at Jayanagar in Bangalore, India. The aim is to determine the effect of topical coconut oil application on:
* The incidence of neonatal late onset culture positive sepsis
* Neonatal skin integrity versus a no treatment control using standard skin evaluation methods
* Biomarkers of neonatal innate immune function
* Temperature instability, weight gain, intraventricular hemorrhage, necrotizing enterocolitis, retinopathy of prematurity, chronic lung disease, and mortality.
The investigators hypothesize that twice daily topical coconut oil application will reduce the incidence of late onset sepsis (LOS) in premature and full-term infants versus the current standard of care, i.e., no treatment. The oil treatment will increase the neonatal skin barrier integrity measured by validated clinical and instrumental methods. Skin surface biomarkers of innate immune function collected from coconut oil treated skin will indicate less inflammation (lower proinflammatory cytokine levels) than in untreated control skin.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 420
- Premature infants 24-36 weeks gestational age
- Full-term infants 37-42 weeks gestational age
- Less than 48 hours of age at enrollment
- Admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit of Indira Gandhi Institute for Child Health, Cloudnine Hospital at Old Airport Road and Cloudnine Hospital at Jayangar, Bangalore
- Expected to be in the neonatal intensive care unit for at least 4 days after enrollment
- Able to tolerate study procedures as described
- Parent/guardian willing to provide written informed consent
- Medically unstable
- Parent/guardian unable to provide written informed consent
- Presence of inherited cutaneous condition e.g., scalded skin syndrome, epidermolysis bullosa
- Presence of major congenital anomalies
- Infants undergoing surgery
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Coconut oil at 5 mg/Kg body weight twice daily Coconut oil Coconut oil (Parachute Brand) is a marketed product that is routinely used for daily massage after birth for infants in India. An amount of 5 mg/Kg body weight will be applied twice daily by the health care provider from enrollment until discharge, or until day of life 28, whichever occurs first.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Late-onset sepsis rate for intervention versus control Day 3 of life until discharge or day of life 28, whichever occurs first Incidence of late-onset sepsis is defined as an infection that occurs on or after day 3 of life
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Skin rash Day 3 of life until discharge or day of life 28, whichever comes first The skin rash of the outer thigh and perianal region will be quantified from visual inspection of high resolution digital photographs that will be collected with standard positioning and lighting and color corrected. The area of coverage and severity of rash will be judged using published, validated grading scales.
Skin dryness Day 3 of life until discharge or day of life 28, whichever comes first The skin dryness of the outer thigh and perianal region will be quantified from visual inspection of high resolution digital photographs that will be collected with standard positioning and lighting and color corrected. The area of coverage and severity of dryness/scaling will be judged using published, validated grading scales.
Skin erythema Day 3 of life until discharge or day of life 28, whichever comes first The skin erythema (redness) of the outer thigh and perianal region will be quantified from visual inspection of high resolution digital photographs that will be collected with standard positioning and lighting and color corrected. The area of coverage and severity of erythema will be judged using published, validated grading scales.
Skin transepidermal water loss Day 3 of life until discharge or day of life 28, whichever comes first The rate of transepidermal water loss of a site on the outer thigh will be measured as grams/meter2/hour using a standard, closed-chamber instrument known as the Vapometer. This instrument will provide the transepidermal water loss value once the system reaches equilibrium. This method has previously been validated and is used routinely for skin measurements.
Skin surface acidity (pH) Day 3 of life until discharge or day of life 28, whichever comes first The skin surface acidity of a site on the outer thigh and a site on the buttocks covered by the diaper will be measured using a flat surface electrode device that is calibrated daily to buffers of pH 4 and pH 7. The surface acidity is given in pH units which are the negative log to the base 10 of the hydrogen ion concentration of water placed on the skin by the instrument probe. The instrument is designed for use on the skin and has been validated.
Set of skin surface proteins of known innate immune function Day 3 of life until discharge or day of life 28, whichever comes first There are proteins in the skin surface layers known to be biomarkers of innate immune function. Each protein will be quantified and reported as picograms of protein per microgram of total protein. The specific proteins are: filaggrin, filaggrin 2, transglutaminase 3, S100A8 (antimicrobial, calcium binding protein), S100A7 (antimicrobial, calcium binding protein), SERPINB3 (cysteine protease inhibitor), SERPINB4 (protease inhibitor), elafin (protease inhibitor) keratins 1, 6A and 6B (structural proteins) and fatty acid elongase 1 (lipid). Levels of each protein will be evaluated together to compare effect of the intervention versus control.
Samples from skin surface will be collected using two sequential adhesive tapes (gentle adhesive) placed on the skin sites (thigh, buttocks covered by diaper) for one minute each, removed and stored at -80 deg C until analysis. The proteins will be extracted and analyzed for using standard techniques of tandem mass spectrometry.Skin Microbiome Day 3 of life until discharge or day of life 28, whichever comes first Microbiome analyses of neonatal skin and stool to determine the effect of coconut oil versus no treatment on microflora
Chronic lung disease Day 3 of life until discharge or day of life 28, whichever comes first The incidence of chronic lung disease among the subjects in the intervention (coconut oil) will be compared to the incidence in the no treatment control during the study period. Chronic lung disease will be diagnosed based on the subject's oxygen requirement at 36 weeks corrected age.
Causative Organisms of Sepsis Day 3 of life until discharge or day of life 28, whichever comes first Sepsis diagnosis includes determination of the organisms to which sepsis was attributed
Necrotizing enterocolitis Day 3 of life until discharge or day of life 28, whichever comes first. The impact of coconut oil versus no treatment on the incidence of necrotizing enterocolitis during the study period
Trial Locations
- Locations (2)
Cloudnine Hospital
🇮🇳Bangalore, India
Indira Gandhi Institute of Child Health
🇮🇳Bangalore, India