Child Health Division, Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia.
Trials. 2011 Apr 14;12:94. doi: 10.1186/1745-6215-12-94.
Acute lower respiratory infections are the commonest cause of morbidity and potentially preventable mortality in Indigenous infants. Infancy is also a critical time for post-natal lung growth and development. Severe or repeated lower airway injury in very young children likely increases the likelihood of chronic pulmonary disorders later in life. Globally, bronchiolitis is the most common form of acute lower respiratory infections during infancy. Compared with non-Indigenous Australian infants, Indigenous infants have greater bacterial density in their upper airways and more severe bronchiolitis episodes. Our study tests the hypothesis that the anti-microbial and anti-inflammatory properties of azithromycin, improve the clinical outcomes of Indigenous Australian infants hospitalised with bronchiolitis.
We are conducting a dual centre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group trial in northern Australia. Indigenous infants (aged ≤ 24-months, expected number = 200) admitted to one of two regional hospitals (Darwin, Northern Territory and Townsville, Queensland) with a clinical diagnosis of bronchiolitis and fulfilling inclusion criteria are randomised (allocation concealed) to either azithromycin (30 mg/kg/dose) or placebo administered once weekly for three doses. Clinical data are recorded twice daily and nasopharyngeal swab are collected at enrollment and at the time of discharge from hospital. Primary outcomes are 'length of oxygen requirement' and 'duration of stay,' the latter based upon being judged as 'ready for respiratory discharge'. The main secondary outcome is readmission for a respiratory illness within 6-months of leaving hospital. Descriptive virological and bacteriological (including development of antibiotic resistance) data from nasopharyngeal samples will also be reported.
Two published studies, both involving different patient populations and settings, as well as different macrolide antibiotics and treatment duration, have produced conflicting results. Our randomised, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin in Indigenous infants hospitalised with bronchiolitis is designed to determine whether it can reduce short-term (and potentially long-term) morbidity from respiratory illness in Australian Indigenous infants who are at high risk of developing chronic respiratory illness. If azithromycin is efficacious in reducing the morbidly of Indigenous infants hospitalised with bronchiolitis, the intervention would lead to improved short term (and possibly long term) health benefits.
急性下呼吸道感染是原住民婴儿发病率最高、潜在可预防死亡的主要原因。婴儿期也是出生后肺部生长和发育的关键时期。幼儿期严重或反复的下呼吸道损伤可能会增加其日后患慢性肺部疾病的可能性。在全球范围内,细支气管炎是婴儿期最常见的急性下呼吸道感染形式。与非原住民澳大利亚婴儿相比,原住民婴儿上呼吸道的细菌密度更高,细支气管炎发作更为严重。我们的研究检验了这样一个假设,即阿奇霉素的抗菌和抗炎特性可以改善因细支气管炎住院的澳大利亚原住民婴儿的临床结局。
我们正在澳大利亚北部进行一项双中心、随机、双盲、安慰剂对照、平行组试验。符合纳入标准的被诊断患有细支气管炎并入院的≤ 24 月龄的原住民婴儿(预计人数= 200 人)将被随机分配(分配隐藏)至阿奇霉素(30 mg/kg/剂量)或安慰剂组,每周一次,共三次。每天两次记录临床数据,并在入院时和出院时采集鼻咽拭子。主要结局是“吸氧时间”和“住院时间”,后者基于“准备好呼吸出院”来判断。主要次要结局是出院后 6 个月内因呼吸道疾病再次入院。还将报告鼻咽样本的病毒学和细菌学(包括抗生素耐药性的发展)描述性数据。
两项已发表的研究,均涉及不同的患者人群和环境,以及不同的大环内酯类抗生素和治疗持续时间,得出了相互矛盾的结果。我们在因细支气管炎住院的原住民婴儿中进行的阿奇霉素随机、安慰剂对照试验旨在确定它是否可以降低澳大利亚原住民婴儿的短期(和潜在的长期)呼吸道疾病发病率,这些婴儿有发展为慢性呼吸道疾病的高风险。如果阿奇霉素能有效减轻因细支气管炎住院的原住民婴儿的发病严重程度,那么该干预措施将带来短期(可能还有长期)的健康益处。