Diarrhea Clinical Trial
Official title:
PROMISE EBF: Promoting Infant Health and Nutrition in Sub-Saharan Africa: Safety and Efficacy of Exclusive Breastfeeding Promotion in the Era of HIV
The objective of the project is to develop and test an intervention to promote exclusive
breastfeeding (EBF), to assess its impact on infant health in African contexts where a high
prevalence of HIV is a barrier, and to strengthen the evidence base regarding the optimal
duration for EBF.
Promotion of EBF is the most effective child health intervention currently feasible for
implementation at the population level in low-income countries. It can lower infant
mortality by 13%, and by an additional 2% were it not for the fact that breastfeeding
transmits HIV. Only recently proven to be possible in hot and even dry climates, EBF without
even offering water is still little appreciated by mothers or supported by health workers.
EBF rates are especially low in Africa but the potential for rapid implementation may be
high. A few studies elsewhere suggest that peer counselling can often achieve dramatic
increases. Thus the investigators will run the first randomised trial to develop and test
models for applying this approach in four African countries and to quantify health benefits,
cost-effectiveness, and implications for the health care system.
While experts realize that the HIV threat ought not to present much of a biological
constraint to promoting EBF, in heavily affected countries it does represent a cultural
constraint. Overcoming this will require the development of a safe and effective means of
promoting EBF that is HIV-sensitive by taking into account the need to minimise postnatal
HIV transmission.
Another scientific constraint to the promotion of exclusive breastfeeding for six months, as
recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), is uncertainty about its impact on the
micronutrient status of infants. In a substudy, the investigators will carefully follow
markers of infant micronutrient status to see how they vary by feeding pattern, including
EBF, for a longer period than has been examined previously.
Rationale
The single most effective way of saving the lives of millions of young children in
developing countries would be the promotion of exclusive breastfeeding (EBF). Over a period
of 10 years it could save the lives of an estimated 15 million children.
"Infants aged 0-5 months who are not breastfed have seven-fold and five-fold increased risks
of death from diarrhoea and pneumonia respectively, compared with infants who are
exclusively breastfed. At the same age, non-exclusive rather than exclusive breastfeeding
results in more than two-fold increased risks of dying from diarrhoea and pneumonia." Lancet
2003; 361: 2226-34
This assertion, and related comments and findings, set out by the Bellagio Child Survival
Group in a recent article in the Lancet summarising findings from international research of
how best to reduce infant mortality in developing countries, is made despite our limited
knowledge of how best to promote EBF. This proposal addresses the urgent need to tackle this
limitation. How best to promote EBF needs attention because it will be necessary to secure
high rates of support for EBF from young mothers, and we do not currently know the best way
to bring this about, particularly in the cultural context of Africa. Unless we can find more
effective strategies to combat poor feeding practices in both health facility and community
settings, the child mortality rate will continue to be high.
Breastfeeding
The benefits of breastfeeding and the negative effects of artificial feeding in
underprivileged environments were clearly brought to the public attention in the 1970s,
backed by increasingly strong scientific support. As a result the International Code of
Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes and subsequent World Health Assembly Resolutions were
created in the 1980s to avoid the marketing of infant foods, teats and bottles in ways that
could interfere with breastfeeding. In the early 1990s, UNICEF started the "Baby-friendly
Hospital Initiative" (BFHI), which decreased many of the practices in the health care system
that had a negative impact on breastfeeding. Together with many of the other child health
programmes during these decades these interventions contributed to a reduction in child
morbidity and mortality.
Exclusive Breastfeeding - An Even Better Version of Breastfeeding
EBF means that the infant receives nothing else other than breast milk, not even water. That
breastfed children do not need anything besides breast milk, not even water, and not even in
hot climates, was discovered in the 1970s. A decade of research confirmed this, followed by
an attempt to define breastfeeding into various patterns by WHO.
EBF is not a traditional concept; beliefs and practices regarding a wide range of early
supplements are common around the world, and often seem to reflect beliefs expressed by
early physicians. Nor is it widely understood by health care professionals, given the lack
of information on it even in most paediatric basic training.
So if EBF is able to lower child mortality by 13%, why is it not promoted on a large scale
already today? Two major reasons are: fear of HIV transmission through breast milk and
uncertainty about the micronutrient status in children exclusively breastfed for 6 months.
Breastfeeding and Risk of HIV Transmission
When an HIV-positive mother breastfeeds for 1.5 years or more, this appears to lead to an
additional 15% risk of postnatal HIV transmission on average. At a population level the
epidemiological evidence is that exclusive breastfeeding should still be promoted even in
countries with a high prevalence of HIV. For many HIV positive mothers the risk of
transmitting HIV to their children is outweighed by the risk of the infant dying if not
breastfed because of the poor socioeconomic and environmental conditions they live in.
Limited evidence suggests that for these women and their children EBF is even more
important, not just for minimising respiratory and gastrointestinal infections but also
perhaps in reducing the risk of HIV transmission. However in reality the HIV epidemic has
undermined breastfeeding promotion efforts especially in countries that would benefit the
most. In addition, expensive approaches of dealing with HIV have removed the focus from
breastfeeding as an inexpensive way of promoting optimal child health.
Intervention: Peer Counselling
The constraints discussed above have meant that efforts to promote EBF have been rudimentary
so far, consisting mainly of the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative. But in Africa nearly all
such efforts have come almost to a complete standstill in recent years. EBF promotion
therefore needs to be reshaped in this era of HIV. The challenge is to urgently put back on
track the promotion of exclusive breastfeeding for the benefit of the world's children
without losing credibility by doing it indiscriminately. PROMISE will fine-tune and test an
upgraded version of EBF-promotion that is HIV-sensitive and do it in four African countries
with a high prevalence of HIV where it is most needed. In particular, it will be the first
study to deal explicitly with each of these constraints, opening the way for a more
widespread and successful promotion of EBF, especially in Africa, ultimately giving back to
Africa one of the powerful and cheap interventions to prevent child mortality and morbidity.
Peer counselling is a proven cost-effective approach for changing behaviour, for example,
preventing HIV infection. Several studies have also examined its impact on breastfeeding
behaviour. Based largely on quasi-experimental studies peer counselling was shown to have an
impact on the duration of any breastfeeding.
Potential Impact
This study will provide the first data from a randomised trial on the safety and efficacy of
peer counselling as a way of increasing rates of exclusive breastfeeding in the African
context. Outcomes include morbidity, growth, and micronutrient status.
PROMISE EBF will provide an example to the world of how efforts to promote exclusive
breastfeeding and avoid postnatal HIV transmission can be done jointly, and what synergisms
may result. Methods employed and costs will be documented and reported on to increase the
ease of replication and sustainability.
In Africa, there is a growing awareness that strategies must be identified and tested that
can lead to the highest possible infant survival rate in the face of the risk of postnatal
HIV transmission. In 1997 UNAIDS, WHO and UNICEF changed their policy on HIV and infant
feeding, and issued guidelines for implementing this new policy a year later. Whereas
previously countries where most infant mortality was due to infection and malnutrition were
advised to promote breastfeeding irrespective of the mother's HIV status, the new policy
called for individual counselling on the advantages and disadvantages of breastfeeding vs.
artificial feeding that would enable mothers to make an informed choice. UNICEF provided
free formula at a number of pilot sites.
Methodology
Design
A prospective, multi-center, community-randomised, controlled, experimental design will be
used to execute this trial.
Randomization
A number of over 30 randomisation units should be identified within a reasonable distance
from the study office. The randomisation unit varies between sites but will typically be 1-2
villages with an average of 1000 inhabitants (about 35 infants born per year given a birth
rate of 3%). Before engaging in the selection of communities, extensive information will be
given to community leaders and the rest of the selection process will be done in close
collaboration with community leaders. Within the district the suitable communities will be
selected and groups considered similar, based on location, urban-rural, and socioeconomic
status will be stratified. Care will be taken to allow for 'corridors' between selected
communities to be randomised. In each stratum half of the communities will be randomised to
intervention and the reminder to control communities. Local community leaders will be
further informed about the study.
Each of the clusters should be visited and checked for size, for collaborative
administrative leaders, and for not sharing important facilities (water supply,
market/shop/trading centre, primary school, mosque, church) with any other potential
cluster. If both urban and rural clusters are included no less than 30% of each should be
included. The complete list of randomisable clusters will be checked and 24 clusters will be
randomised in each site, if applicable in the rural/urban strata.
The study will be carried out in four African countries, Burkina Faso in French-speaking
West Africa, Uganda in East Africa, Zambia in Central Africa and South Africa in Southern
Africa.
In each country one or more districts have been selected as the intervention sites, Banfora
in the South-west of Burkina-Faso, Mbale District in Eastern Uganda, Mazabuka in Southern
Province in Zambia and three sites in South Africa: Umlazi in Durban, KwaZulu Natal,
Rietvlei in the Eastern Cape and Paarl in the Western Cape. Pregnant women in the randomised
communities (= clusters) will be informed about the study and asked if they are willing to
participate. If they agree, an enrolment interview will be carried out and based on
eligibility criteria the women will or will not be accepted into the study.
Sample Size and Power
Of the primary outcome measures the decrease in diarrhoea is the most difficult to catch. We
have based our sample size calculation on the expected reduction in cases of diarrhoea (at
the age of 3 months) over the last two weeks of one third from 12% to 8%. With a 95%
confidence interval (alpha error 0.05) and power of 80%, an average number of infants of 35
per randomised community, and a coefficient of variation between the communities of 0.3, we
will need to randomise 48 communities in each arm - a total of 96 communities. This will
include 420 infants in each arm in each country, a total of 840 children per country and all
in all 3360 children studied across the four sites. This sample size will very accurately
give us the increase in EBF and be able to document the above decrease in diarrhoea
morbidity.
Recruitment Procedure
The recruitment procedure will be adapted to the local circumstances. In the most common
case, each cluster will have a recruiter ("pregnancy monitor") who will be a mature woman of
good repute living within the cluster. The pregnancy monitors will inform the research
centre about pregnant women that may be eligible to participate in the study. A data
collector/research assistant will be sent to visit the woman to ascertain eligibility,
obtain consent to participate in the study and conduct the recruitment interview.
In South Africa, the recruitment of women will be done at the health facility in the
antenatal clinic, where a data collector/research assistant will interview the woman to
ascertain eligibility, obtain consent to participate in the study and conduct the
recruitment interview.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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