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Early Life Interventions for Childhood Growth and Development in Tanzania (ELICIT): a protocol for a randomised factorial, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin, nitazoxanide and nicotinamide

Early Life Interventions for Childhood Growth and Development in Tanzania (ELICIT): a protocol for a randomised factorial, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin, nitazoxanide and nicotinamide
Early Life Interventions for Childhood Growth and Development in Tanzania (ELICIT): a protocol for a randomised factorial, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin, nitazoxanide and nicotinamide

INTRODUCTION: In many developing areas in the world, a high burden of enteric pathogens in early childhood are associated with growth deficits. The tryptophan-kynurenine-niacin pathway has been linked to enteric inflammatory responses to intestinal infections. However, it is not known in these settings whether scheduled antimicrobial intervention to reduce subclinical enteric pathogen carriage or repletion of the tryptophan-kynurenine-niacin pathway improves linear growth and development.

METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We are conducting a randomised, placebo-controlled, factorial intervention trial in the rural setting of Haydom, Tanzania. We are recruiting 1188 children within the first 14 days of life, who will be randomised in a 2×2 factorial design to administration of antimicrobials (azithromycin and nitazoxanide, randomised together) and nicotinamide. The nicotinamide is administered as a daily oral dose, which for breast-feeding children aged 0-6 months is given to the mother and for children aged 6-18 months is given to the child directly. Azithromycin is given to the child as a single oral dose at months 6, 9, 12 and 15; nitazoxanide is given as a 3-day course at months 12 and 15. Mother/child pairs are followed via monthly in-home visits. The primary outcome is the child's length-for-age Z-score at 18 months. Secondary outcomes for the child include additional anthropometry measures; stool pathogen burden and bacterial microbiome; systemic and enteric inflammation; blood metabolomics, growth factors, inflammation and nutrition; hydrogen breath assessment to estimate small-intestinal bacterial overgrowth and assessment of cognitive development. Secondary outcomes for the mother include breastmilk content of nicotinamide, other vitamins and amino acids; blood measures of tryptophan-kynurenine-niacin pathway and stool pathogens.

ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This trial has been approved by the Tanzanian National Institute for Medical Research, the Tanzanian FDA and the University of Virginia IRB. Findings will be presented at national and international conferences and published in peer-review journals.

PROTOCOL VERSION: 5.0, 4 December 2017.

PROTOCOL SPONSOR: Haydom Lutheran Hospital, Haydom, Manyara, Tanzania.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT03268902; Pre-results.

Administration, Oral, Anti-Bacterial Agents/administration & dosage, Antiparasitic Agents/administration & dosage, Azithromycin/administration & dosage, Breast Feeding, Double-Blind Method, Female, Growth and Development/drug effects, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Mothers, Niacinamide/administration & dosage, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Tanzania, Thiazoles/administration & dosage, Vitamin B Complex/administration & dosage
2044-6055
1-13
DeBoer, Mark Daniel
8ca3c619-1ce0-4343-b3cd-9974d8459a3d
Platts-Mills, James A.
52776d02-b7d3-4e89-a50a-7cbf2c1044b6
Scharf, Rebecca J.
5bf79ede-252a-4e72-b124-2f5e8592fdb4
McDermid, Joann M.
70d3f6f2-8eed-4639-b0ca-ddb546d8723d
Wanjuhi, Anne W.
03a853e8-b197-410c-826a-b647219ec4c0
Gratz, Jean
47702b9b-abc4-4b45-8cb4-84ee038b0c9d
Svensen, Erling
c62db8f4-cf1b-4f69-b3ca-ef33ce19b8b7
Swann, Jonathan R.
7c11a66b-f4b8-4dbf-aa17-ad8b0561b85c
Donowitz, Jeffrey R.
71866d1f-b33b-4772-b86a-b9497a92f18c
Jatosh, Samwel
fbded3d5-64fb-40d2-baf3-576eaac2e762
Houpt, Eric R.
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Mduma, Estomih
dd4035a4-cc0c-41cf-8dc6-5e1aa489e81f
DeBoer, Mark Daniel
8ca3c619-1ce0-4343-b3cd-9974d8459a3d
Platts-Mills, James A.
52776d02-b7d3-4e89-a50a-7cbf2c1044b6
Scharf, Rebecca J.
5bf79ede-252a-4e72-b124-2f5e8592fdb4
McDermid, Joann M.
70d3f6f2-8eed-4639-b0ca-ddb546d8723d
Wanjuhi, Anne W.
03a853e8-b197-410c-826a-b647219ec4c0
Gratz, Jean
47702b9b-abc4-4b45-8cb4-84ee038b0c9d
Svensen, Erling
c62db8f4-cf1b-4f69-b3ca-ef33ce19b8b7
Swann, Jonathan R.
7c11a66b-f4b8-4dbf-aa17-ad8b0561b85c
Donowitz, Jeffrey R.
71866d1f-b33b-4772-b86a-b9497a92f18c
Jatosh, Samwel
fbded3d5-64fb-40d2-baf3-576eaac2e762
Houpt, Eric R.
f84650fa-b188-4d3b-8330-25ae8f71e1b4
Mduma, Estomih
dd4035a4-cc0c-41cf-8dc6-5e1aa489e81f

DeBoer, Mark Daniel, Platts-Mills, James A., Scharf, Rebecca J., McDermid, Joann M., Wanjuhi, Anne W., Gratz, Jean, Svensen, Erling, Swann, Jonathan R., Donowitz, Jeffrey R., Jatosh, Samwel, Houpt, Eric R. and Mduma, Estomih (2018) Early Life Interventions for Childhood Growth and Development in Tanzania (ELICIT): a protocol for a randomised factorial, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin, nitazoxanide and nicotinamide. BMJ Open, 8 (7), 1-13, [e021817]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2018-021817).

Record type: Article

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: In many developing areas in the world, a high burden of enteric pathogens in early childhood are associated with growth deficits. The tryptophan-kynurenine-niacin pathway has been linked to enteric inflammatory responses to intestinal infections. However, it is not known in these settings whether scheduled antimicrobial intervention to reduce subclinical enteric pathogen carriage or repletion of the tryptophan-kynurenine-niacin pathway improves linear growth and development.

METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We are conducting a randomised, placebo-controlled, factorial intervention trial in the rural setting of Haydom, Tanzania. We are recruiting 1188 children within the first 14 days of life, who will be randomised in a 2×2 factorial design to administration of antimicrobials (azithromycin and nitazoxanide, randomised together) and nicotinamide. The nicotinamide is administered as a daily oral dose, which for breast-feeding children aged 0-6 months is given to the mother and for children aged 6-18 months is given to the child directly. Azithromycin is given to the child as a single oral dose at months 6, 9, 12 and 15; nitazoxanide is given as a 3-day course at months 12 and 15. Mother/child pairs are followed via monthly in-home visits. The primary outcome is the child's length-for-age Z-score at 18 months. Secondary outcomes for the child include additional anthropometry measures; stool pathogen burden and bacterial microbiome; systemic and enteric inflammation; blood metabolomics, growth factors, inflammation and nutrition; hydrogen breath assessment to estimate small-intestinal bacterial overgrowth and assessment of cognitive development. Secondary outcomes for the mother include breastmilk content of nicotinamide, other vitamins and amino acids; blood measures of tryptophan-kynurenine-niacin pathway and stool pathogens.

ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This trial has been approved by the Tanzanian National Institute for Medical Research, the Tanzanian FDA and the University of Virginia IRB. Findings will be presented at national and international conferences and published in peer-review journals.

PROTOCOL VERSION: 5.0, 4 December 2017.

PROTOCOL SPONSOR: Haydom Lutheran Hospital, Haydom, Manyara, Tanzania.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT03268902; Pre-results.

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Accepted/In Press date: 4 May 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 July 2018
Published date: July 2018
Keywords: Administration, Oral, Anti-Bacterial Agents/administration & dosage, Antiparasitic Agents/administration & dosage, Azithromycin/administration & dosage, Breast Feeding, Double-Blind Method, Female, Growth and Development/drug effects, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Mothers, Niacinamide/administration & dosage, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Tanzania, Thiazoles/administration & dosage, Vitamin B Complex/administration & dosage

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 440818
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/440818
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: b30c3aa2-eaef-4184-9606-6ff7f4a6367d
ORCID for Jonathan R. Swann: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6485-4529

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Date deposited: 19 May 2020 17:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:00

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Contributors

Author: Mark Daniel DeBoer
Author: James A. Platts-Mills
Author: Rebecca J. Scharf
Author: Joann M. McDermid
Author: Anne W. Wanjuhi
Author: Jean Gratz
Author: Erling Svensen
Author: Jeffrey R. Donowitz
Author: Samwel Jatosh
Author: Eric R. Houpt
Author: Estomih Mduma

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