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Oral omoxicillin plus gentamicin regimes may be superior to the procaine-penicillin plus gentamicin regimens for treatment of young infant with possible serious bacterial infection when referral is not feasible pooled analysis from three trials in Africa and Asia

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dc.contributor.author Longombe, Adrien Lokangaka
dc.contributor.author Ayede, Adejumoke Idowu
dc.contributor.author Marete, Irene
dc.contributor.author Mir, Fatima
dc.contributor.author Ejembi, Clara Ladi
dc.contributor.author Shahidullah, Mohammod
dc.contributor.author Adejuyigbe, Ebunoluwa A.
dc.contributor.author Wammanda, Robinson D.
dc.contributor.author Tshefu, Antoinette
dc.contributor.author Esamai, Fabian
dc.contributor.author Zaidi, Anita K.
dc.contributor.author Baqu, Abdullah H.
dc.contributor.author Cousens, Simon
dc.date.accessioned 2023-06-27T05:32:07Z
dc.date.available 2023-06-27T05:32:07Z
dc.date.issued 2022
dc.identifier.uri https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9676044/
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/7662
dc.description.abstract Background: Hospital referral and admission in many- low and middle-income countries are not feasible for many young infants with sepsis/possible serious bacterial infection (PSBI). The effectiveness of simplified antibiotic regimens when referral to a hospital was not feasible has been shown before. We analysed the pooled data from the previous trials to compare the risk of poor clinical outcome for young infants with PSBI with the two regimens containing injectable procaine penicillin and gentamicin with the oral amoxicillin plus gentamicin regimen currently recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) when referral is not feasible. Methods: Infant records from three individually randomised trials conducted in Africa and Asia were collated in a standard format. All trials enrolled young infants aged 0-59 days with any sign of PSBI (fever, hypothermia, stopped feeding well, movement only when stimulated, or severe chest indrawing). Eligible young infants whose caretakers refused hospital admission and consented were enrolled and randomised to a trial reference arm (arm A: procaine benzylpenicillin and gentamicin) or two experimental arms (arm B: oral amoxicillin and gentamicin or arm C: procaine benzylpenicillin and gentamicin initially, followed by oral amoxicillin). We compared the rate of poor clinical outcomes by day 15 (deaths till day 15, treatment failure by day 8, and relapse between day 9 and 15) in reference arm A with experimental arms and present risk differences with 95% confidence interval (CI), adjusted for trial. Results: A total of 7617 young infants, randomised to arm A, arm B, or arm C in the three trials, were included in this analysis. Most were 7-59 days old (71%) and predominately males (56%). Slightly over one-fifth of young infants had more than one sign of PSBI at the time of enrolment. Severe chest indrawing (45%), fever (43%), and feeding problems (25%) were the most common signs. Overall, those who received arm B had a lower risk of poor clinical outcome compared to arm A for both per-protocol (risk difference = -2.1%, 95% CI = -3.8%, -0.4%; P = 0.016) and intention-to-treat (risk difference = -1.8%, 95% CI = -3.5%, -0.2%; P = 0.031) analyses. Those who received arm C did not have an increased risk of poor clinical outcome compared to arm A for both per-protocol (risk difference = -1.1%, 95% CI = -2.8%, 0.6%) and intention-to-treat (risk difference = -0.8%, 95% CI = -2.5%, 0.9%) analyses. Overall, those who received arm B had a lower risk of poor clinical outcome compared to the combined arms A and C for both per-protocol (risk difference = -1.6%, 95% CI = -3.5%, -0.1%; P = 0.035) and intention-to-treat (risk difference = -1.4%, 95% CI = -2.8%, -0.1%; P = 0.049) analyses. Conclusions: Analysis of pooled individual patient-level data from three large trials in Africa and Asia showed that the WHO-recommended simplified antibiotic regimen B (oral amoxicillin and injection gentamicin) was superior to regimen A (injection procaine penicillin and injection gentamicin) and combined arms A and C (injection procaine penicillin and injection gentamicin, followed by oral amoxicillin) in terms of poor clinical outcome for the outpatient treatment of young infants with PSBI when inpatient treatment was not feasible. Registration: AFRINEST study [9] is registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry: ACTRN12610000286044. SATT Bangladesh study [10] is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00844337. SATT Pakistan study [11] is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01027429. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher PMC en_US
dc.subject Oral amoxicillin en_US
dc.subject Gentamicin regimens en_US
dc.title Oral omoxicillin plus gentamicin regimes may be superior to the procaine-penicillin plus gentamicin regimens for treatment of young infant with possible serious bacterial infection when referral is not feasible pooled analysis from three trials in Africa and Asia en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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