View clinical trials related to Severe Acute Malnutrition.
Filter by:This randomized controlled trial is designed to determine the effect of administration of azithromycin compared to amoxicillin as part of the treatment of uncomplicated severe acute malnutrition (SAM) in children aged 6-59 months on weight gain and nutritional recovery. The investigators will randomize children presenting to Taimaka-run nutritional programs at health centers in Gombe State, Nigeria to a single dose of oral azithromycin or a short course of oral amoxicillin upon admission into the program. Apart from the administration of antibiotics, all children will receive standard outpatient treatment for uncomplicated SAM as specified in the guidelines of the government of Nigeria, which includes therapeutic feeding with ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF). Enrolled children will be followed weekly at each routine clinic follow-up visit up until nutritional recovery. All enrolled children will return for a final study visit at 8 weeks following enrollment. Anthropometric and vital status data will be collected at each follow-up visit. Weight gain and nutritional recovery over the 8-week study period will be compared by arm as a primary outcome and at 12 weeks as a secondary outcome.
This single-center, randomized, open-label trial will compare the safety of MTT delivered by rectal catheter enema in participants 12-60 months of age with malnutrition (moderate acute malnutrition [MAM] or severe acute malnutrition [SAM]) who are in the rehabilitative phase of treatment and have failed to respond to at least 4 weeks of standard therapy. Participants must meet inclusion criteria, no exclusion criteria prior to randomization. Participants will then be randomized in a 1:1 ratio at each site to 1 of 2 treatment groups: - MTT by rectal catheter enema: 10mL/kg (maximum 150mL, +/- 5ml) of healthy donor human intestinal microbiota will be infused. - Standard of care treatment for malnutrition as prescribed by local and national Department of Health Guidelines Participants will be evaluated through 56 days (±3) after randomization for primary outcomes (safety) as well as secondary outcomes (nutritional, clinical and microbiological response). Participant blood and urine samples will be collected at enrollment and day 56. Participant stool samples will be collected at enrollment and through days 3, 7, 21 and 56, thereafter, 3 months, 4 months, and 6 months. A caregiver stool sample will be collected at enrollment and day 56. Samples will be used for microbiome determination and other exploratory microbiological endpoints. An aliquot of donor stool will also be stored for microbiome determination and other exploratory microbiological endpoints and assessment of newly acquired infectious agents.