Diarrhea Clinical Trial
Official title:
Extended Studies on Safety and Efficacy of Zinc-ORS Compared to ORS Alone in Hospitalized Children With Severe and Complicated Acute Diarrhea
Three-hundred-and-fifty-two males aged 1-36 months with acute non-dysenteric diarrhoea and no systemic illness will be enrolled in this clinical trial. Eligible children will be stratified by their age (1up to 5 months, 6-35 months). Within the two age strata the patients will be randomized to receive zinc-ORS (fortified with 40 mg elemental zinc as zinc gluconate per litre) or standard WHO ORS. The major outcome measures will be stool output and duration of diarrhea. The safety of administering zinc will be determined by examining the effect of zinc ingestion on vomiting, sodium and potassium homeostasis, plasma zinc and copper, and iron stores and concentration of serum transferrin receptor.
Zinc deficiency is prevalent in developing countries due to inadequate food intake, low
intake of foods from animal sources and high dietary intake of phytate, a substance that
reduces zinc absorption. A recently completed trial at All India Institute Of Medical
Sciences (AIIMS) measured the effect of zinc-ORS in the community, where most episodes are
relatively mild. Zinc-ORS was efficacious in reducing the total number of stools (19%
relative risk reduction, 95% CI 15% to 23%) and duration of diarrhoea (11% relative risk
reduction, 95% CI 4% to 24%). In order to make policy decisions that standard ORS provided
to children be fortified with zinc the national (and international) child health programs
need a similar evidence base also for children hospitalized because of acute diarrhea. This
is because these children represent the more severe end of the disease spectrum, i.e. they
are the ones who are at the highest risk of dying.
The primary objective is to conduct a study of zinc-ORS in a hospital setting (i.e. of more
severe diarrhea) to optimize and accurately measure the amount of zinc-ORS consumed and
monitor stool output which is not possible in a field setting. The study will also examine
the safety of using zinc-ORS; whether zinc-ORS affects the blood levels of sodium and
potassium and of other micronutrients than zinc, such as copper and iron. The study will
contribute to introducing a more efficacious ORS and help increase the ORS use rate which
continues to be an important public health challenge in India.
The study will be carried out at two Clinical Research Facilities supervised by the Centre
for Diarrhoeal Diseases and Nutrition Research, Division of Gastroenterology, Department of
Pediatrics, AIIMS. 352 males aged 1-36 months with acute non-dysenteric diarrhoea and no
systemic illness will be enrolled. Eligible children will be first stratified by their age
(1up to 5 months, 6-35 months). Within the two age strata the patients will be randomized to
receive zinc-ORS (fortified with 40 mg elemental zinc as zinc gluconate per litre) or
standard WHO ORS. The major outcome measures will be stool output and duration of diarrhea.
The safety of administering zinc will be determined by examining the effect of zinc
ingestion on vomiting, sodium and potassium homeostasis, plasma zinc and copper, and iron
stores and concentration of serum transferrin receptor. Minimum period of the study will be
48 hours and subjects will be discharged when diarrhoea has ceased or at 48 hours, whichever
is later.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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