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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00168532
Other study ID # ProfAnt-BHP-1996
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 3
First received September 9, 2005
Last updated February 25, 2008
Start date January 1998
Est. completion date October 2001

Study information

Verified date February 2008
Source Bandim Health Project
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority Guinea-Bissau: Ministry of HealthGambia: MRC Ethics Committee
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Objective It is the objective to test whether the use of prophylactic antibiotics in measles infection will reduce the incidence of post-measles pneumonia and/or admissions to hospital with 50%. The possible impact on other complications of severe measles will also be measured.


Description:

Background The case-fatality rate of measles in developing countries is still high, particularly in infants. It is estimated that measles is responsible for more than one million deaths per year, and that most of these deaths are due to complications of the disease.

Most of the severe complications of measles in developing countries are due to secondary bacterial and viral infections causing pneumonia and diarrhea.

A study from the fifties showed no benefit from treating measles cases prophylactically with antibiotics, and this together with the fear for developing antibiotic resistance has given rise to the dogma that it is harmful to give prophylactic antibiotics in measles infection.

A more recent study from Niakhar, a rural area of Senegal, has shown that children treated with prophylactic antibiotics had a lower frequency of respiratory complications. In 1987 it was decided that all children younger than 3 years of age seen within the first 2 weeks of the onset of measles symptoms should be treated with the antibiotic trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole for 7 days irrespective of whether they had signs of bacterial infection at the time of clinical examinations. Children younger than 3 years of age who had received prophylactic antibiotics were less likely to have respiratory symptoms on days 8 to 15 of illness than children of the same age group who had not received antibiotics because they were seen for the first time on days 8 to 15 (relative risk, 0.37 (0.15 to 0.94)). Further, the case-fatality rates adjusted for age declined 2-fold between 1983-1986 and between 1987-1991 (mortality ratio, 0.41 (0.21 to 0.81)).

As this study was not an unbiased evaluation, it would be desirable to do a randomized doubleblind placebocontrolled trial of prophylactic use of antibiotics in measles infection. This could potentially prevent a large number of measles-related complications and deaths.

Participation and randomization Measles cases included in the study will receive treatment with either co-trimoxazole or the identical looking placebo. The co-trimoxazole and the placebo will be packed in identical looking sacks marked with a randomization number. The code will be broken only after the end of the study period.

Informed consent will be obtained from the parents or guardians. It will be explained that the study will examine whether antibiotics can prevent later complications, it is not known whether this is indeed the case. Therefore there will be one group receiving active treatment, and another group receiving placebo, and we do not know to which group the measles case belongs. It will also be explained if they do not want to participate, the management of the measles case will be as otherwise done in the study area.

Measles cases not included in the study will receive standard treatment.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 218
Est. completion date October 2001
Est. primary completion date October 2001
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 3 Months and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- A clinical diagnosis of probable measles in the prodromal phase or within the first seven days of the onset of the rash

Exclusion Criteria:

- Pregnant and nursing women

- Children less than 2 months old

- Children who need urgent referral to the hospital, children with bacterial infections of the lung, or children with another bacterial infection requiring systemic antibiotic treatment.

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Sulfamethoxazole-Trimethoprim


Locations

Country Name City State
Guinea-Bissau Bandim Health Project Bissau Apartado 861

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Bandim Health Project Medical Research Council Unit, The Gambia

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Guinea-Bissau, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Post-measles pneumonia
Primary Admission to hospital
Secondary Weight gain or loss during the first month of infection
Secondary Diarrhoea
Secondary Severe fever
Secondary Oral thrush
Secondary Stomatitis
Secondary Conjunctivitis
Secondary Otitis media
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