Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Indiaclen Short course of Amoxicillin in treatment of Pneumonia (ISCAP) 3 versus 5 days amoxicillin for treatment of non-severe pneumonia in young children:

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Indiaclen Short course of Amoxicillin in treatment of Pneumonia (ISCAP) 3 versus 5 days amoxicillin for treatment of non-severe pneumonia in young children:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Indiaclen Short course of Amoxicillin in treatment of Pneumonia (ISCAP) 3 versus 5 days amoxicillin for treatment of non-severe pneumonia in young children: a double blind, placebo controlled multi-centric randomized trial Funding Agency USAID through IndiaClen/INCLEN

2 Study Location - Mumbai - Lucknow - Lucknow - Nagpur - Nagpur - New Delhi - New Delhi - Chandigarh - Chandigarh - Trivandrum - Trivandrum - Vellore - Vellore C N.D L N M V T C=Chandigarh N.D= N. Delhi, L=Lucknow, N=Nagpur, M=Mumbai, T=Trivendrum, V=Vellore

3 BACKGROUND ARI is the biggest killer of under 5 children in developing countries including India. ARI Control Programme in India recommends cotrimoxazole as first line drug for non-severe pneumonia. Reports of significant in vivo and in vitro resistance to cotrimoxazole. Clinical studies showing high treatment failure with cotrimoxazole.

4 Objectives Primary To compare the proportions of children recovering on 3-day versus 5-day treatment with oral amoxicillin in children aged 2-59 months presenting with non-severe pneumonia, with or without wheeze

5 Objectives Secondary To compare  Proportion who relapse within the next 6-14 days of observation  Proportion who had resistant strains of S.pneumoniae and H.influenzae in nasopharyngeal cultures at the time of enrollment and at 12-14 days follow-up  Direct medical cost of treatment of clinical failures and relapses in both groups (Data not shown)

6 Outcome Measures  Clinical Cure- on day 6  Clinical failure- Till day 6  Clinical relapse days 7-14

7 DEFINITIONS Clinical cure: Return of respiratory rate to age specific WHO cut off. Clinical Failure: Development of chest indrawing with danger signs or persistence of fast breathing at day 3 or later leading to therapy change. Relapse : Development of signs of pneumonia between day 6 -14.

8 Inclusion Criteria  Children aged 2 - 59 months  with non-severe pneumonia (WHO defined)  Written informed consent

9 Exclusion criteria Exclusion criteria  severe pneumonia or very severe disease (WHO defined)  severe malnutrition  other infectious conditions requiring antibiotics therapy  clinically recognized congenital heart disease  known or clinically recognized chronic systemic disorder  history of repeated wheezing including physicians diagnosed asthma  hospitalization in past 2 weeks  use of antibiotics in previous 2 days  measles within the last month  known history of penicillin allergy  prior enrollment in the study

10 Sample Size  Calculated to test equivalence hypothesis to detect difference of 4.5% using one sided t- test and 90% power, assuming 12% failure rate with amoxycillin  Required number of patients was 950 in each group

11 Intervention  Scored amoxicillin dispersible tablet (125 mg/tablet) for the first three days 4-6 kg ½ tablet per dose 4-6 kg ½ tablet per dose 7-10 kg 1 tablet per dose 7-10 kg 1 tablet per dose 11-15 kg 1 ½ tablets per dose 11-15 kg 1 ½ tablets per dose 16-20 kg 2 tablets per dose 16-20 kg 2 tablets per dose Effective dose per kg body weight – 31 to 54 mg/day  For the next two days they received either amoxicillin or placebo

12 FINAL OUTCOME 3 days = 1095 5 days = 1093 Failure = 68 Resolved = 1027 Failure =73 Resolved = 1020 Failure= 47 Resolved = 980 Failure= 37 Resolved = 983 Relapse=32 Cured = 948 Relapse= 29 Cured = 954 1 st follow-up 2 nd follow-up 3 rd follow-up

13 Results Table 1: Loss to follow-up Absolute difference, C.I Total N % 5 day AMX N % 3 day AMX N % 0.2 (-2.2, 2.5) 190 8.794 8.696 9.8LTF Day 12-14 0.4 (-1.5, 2.4) 129 5.967 6.162 5.7LTF Day 6 0.5 (-1, 2.0) 80 3.743 3.937 3.4LTF Day 4

14 Results Table 2: Adherence to treatment types 0.661865 85.2 928 84.9 937 85.6 Adherence at 5 day 0.782057 94 1026 93.9 1031 94.2 Adherence at 3 day p-valueTotal n% 5-day AMX n % 3-day AMX n %

15 Results Table 3: Outcome Measures (Per Protocol) 3-day AMX N % 5-day AMX N % Absolute Difference 95% C.I Total recruited10331026 Cure on day 6980 94.9983 95.80.9 (-0.9, 2.8) Relapse32 3.329 3.00.3 (-1.2, 1.85)

16 Results Table 4: Risk factors associated with failures by logistic analysis Unadjusted OR C.I Adjusted OR C.I Variable 2.1 (.9, 4.9) 1.95 (1.0, 3.8) RSV positivity -11.57 (7.4, 18.0) Non-Adherence at 5 days 2.8 (1.5, 5.2) 2.82 (1.8, 4.45) Excess Respiratory Rate more than 10 bmp 13.1 (8.5, 20.2)

17 Resistance pattern of isolates in two treatment types P value =0.01

18 CONCLUSIONS 1. Oral amoxicillin for 3 days is as effective clinically as 5 days in the treatment of children 2-59 months old suffering from non severe pneumonia. 2. In S. pneumoniae on day 12 – 14 an increased in-vitro resistance to cotrimoxazole with 5 day treatment seen.

19 For the treatment of non-severe pneumonia in children 2 to 59 months of age the National ARI Control Programmes already using amoxicillin as first line drug should consider 3 day antibiotic therapy RECOMMENDATIONS


Download ppt "Indiaclen Short course of Amoxicillin in treatment of Pneumonia (ISCAP) 3 versus 5 days amoxicillin for treatment of non-severe pneumonia in young children:"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google