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Clinical Trial Summary

Every six minutes a mother dies from postpartum haemorrhage (PPH) in low-resource countries, in the prime of her life and often leaving behind a young family. In many settings, when a mother dies in childbirth, her infant has less than a 20% chance of surviving past the first month. PPH, defined as a blood loss of more than 500 ml, is the leading cause of maternal death worldwide, accounting for 27% of maternal deaths. The WHO published "Recommendations for the Prevention and Treatment of Postpartum Hemorrhage" in 2012 to provide evidence-informed recommendations for managing PPH. However, adherence to these recommendations is currently limited by a number of challenges. This primary aim of this multi-country, parallel cluster randomised trial with a baseline control phase, along with mixed-methods and health economic evaluations, is to evaluate the implementation of early detection and the use of the World Health Organisation (WHO) MOTIVE 'first response' treatment bundle for postpartum haemorrhage (PPH) on clinical, implementation and resource use outcomes. The investigators will evaluate the implementation through mixed-methods and carry out a health economic evaluation from the public healthcare system perspective.


Clinical Trial Description

The aim of this trial is evaluate the implementation of early detection and the use of the WHO MOTIVE 'first response' treatment bundle for PPH on clinical, implementation and resource use outcomes. The investigators will evaluate the implementation through mixed-methods and carry out a health economic evaluation from the public healthcare system perspective. The investigators will use a multi-country, parallel cluster randomised trial design with a baseline control phase, along with mixed-methods and health economic evaluations. The trial is conducted in secondary level health facilities in four low- and middle- income countries. For this trial, the health facility is the randomisation unit. Health facilities are eligible for inclusion if they have 1000 to 5000 births a year and provide comprehensive obstetric care with ability to perform surgery for PPH. Pre-existing implementation of early detection or bundled approach are exclusion criteria. The research participants are all healthcare providers attending vaginal births in the study facilities. The E-MOTIVE intervention consists of three elements: 1) a strategy for early detection of PPH, which allows triggering of the 'first response' treatment bundle; 2) a 'first response' bundle called "MOTIVE", based on the WHO guideline recommendations and consisting of uterine Massage, Oxytocic drugs, Tranexamic acid, IV fluids and Examination & Escalation; and 3) an implementation strategy, focusing on simulation-based training with peer-assisted learning, local E-MOTIVE champions, feedback of actionable data to providers, calibrated drape with trigger line, and MOTIVE emergency trolley and/or carry case. The control health facilities will deliver usual care with dissemination of the current guidelines. The primary outcome is a composite of the following three clinical outcomes: 1) primary severe PPH defined as blood loss ≥1000 ml following a vaginal birth in the facility measured up to 2 hours postpartum; 2) postpartum laparotomy for bleeding until discharge from the health facility; and 3) postpartum maternal death from bleeding until discharge from the health facility. If any of the components occur, this will be deemed as positive for the primary outcome. The key secondary implementation outcomes of special interest are 1) PPH detection (with the following numerator and denominator: women who objectively had PPH (source-verified blood loss ≥ 500 mL after weighing of the drape) and were diagnosed with PPH by the birth attendants divided by the total number of women who objectively had PPH (source verified blood loss ≥ 500 mL after weighing the drape), and 2) compliance with MOTIVE bundle (with the following numerator and denominator: women who objectively had PPH and were treated with the PPH bundle following a diagnosis of PPH by the birth attendants divided by the total number of women who objectively had PPH (blood loss ≥ 500 mL after weighing of the drape). Secondary outcomes: blood transfusion, uterine tamponade, Intensive Care Unit admissions or higher-level facility transfers, and new-born deaths along with implementation and resource use outcomes. Eighty health facilities will take part in the study. Initially, all health facilities will enter a 7-month baseline period in which they will be following usual care. After this, we will randomise 40 of the 80 health facilities to the E-MOTIVE intervention for 7 months, allowing two months for transition. The other 40 health facilities will continue to follow usual care as per the baseline period for the entire trial duration (16 months). The anticipated sample size for the study will be 215,040 women. This sample size is expected to have over 90% power to detect a 25% relative reduction in the primary outcome from 4% to 3% after allowing for clustering. The number of clusters has been inflated by 10% to allow for drop out of health facilities and for varying cluster sizes. Randomisation will use a minimisation algorithm to balance the intervention and control facilities by the number of vaginal births per health facility, the health facility rate of the composite primary outcome during the baseline phase, the quality of oxytocin used per health facility, and the number of facilities in each arm. During the 7-month baseline phase, the investigators will refine and optimise the E-MOTIVE implementation strategy by piloting it in two to three facilities per country over up to two adaptive cycles for addressing barriers and enablers to delivery and implementation, ahead of the intervention phase. The investigators will also conduct a mixed-methods process evaluation to assess the extent to which the E-MOTIVE intervention has been implemented as intended. The implementation outcomes of interest are fidelity, adoption, adaptation, acceptability, and sustainability, as well as contextual influences and barriers and enablers to implementation. The investigators plan to assess the cost-effectiveness of the E-MOTIVE intervention compared with usual care from a public healthcare system perspective for each country, as measured by incremental cost-effectiveness ratios for a) severe PPH prevented, b) laparotomy for PPH prevented, c) death from PPH avoided, and (d) quality-adjusted life-years prevented. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04341662
Study type Interventional
Source University of Birmingham
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date October 13, 2020
Completion date March 24, 2023