Houston Kirsty A, Gibb Jack G, Mpoya Ayub, Obonyo Nchafatso, Olupot-Olupot Peter, Nakuya Margeret, Evans Jennifer A, George Elizabeth C, Gibb Diana M, Maitland Kathryn
KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Kilifi, Kenya.
Department of Paediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, St Mary's Campus, Norfolk Place, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Wellcome Open Res. 2017 Aug 10;2:62. doi: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.12261.1. eCollection 2017.
The World Health Organization (WHO) rehydration management guidelines (Plan C) for children with acute gastroenteritis (AGE) and severe dehydration are widely practiced in resource-poor settings, yet have never been formally evaluated in a clinical trial. A recent audit of outcome of AGE at Kilifi County Hospital, Kenya noted that 10% of children required high dependency care (20% mortality) and a number developed fluid-related complications. The fluid resuscitation trial, FEAST, conducted in African children with severe febrile illness, demonstrated higher mortality with fluid bolus therapy and raised concerns regarding the safety of rapid intravenous rehydration therapy. Those findings warrant a detailed physiological study of children's responses to rehydration therapy incorporating quantification of myocardial performance and haemodynamic changes. Methods: GASTRO is a multi-centre, unblinded Phase II randomised controlled trial of 120 children aged 2 months to 12 years admitted to hospital with severe dehydration secondary to AGE. Children with severe malnutrition, chronic diarrhoea and congenital/rheumatic heart disease are excluded. Children will be enrolled over 18 months in 3 centres in Kenya and Uganda and followed until 7 days post-discharge. The trial will randomise children 1:1 to standard rapid rehydration using Ringers Lactate (WHO plan 'C' - 100mls/kg over 3-6 hours according to age, plus additional 0.9% saline boluses for children presenting in shock) or to a slower rehydration regimen (100mls/kg given over 8 hours and without the addition of fluid boluses). Enrolment started in November 2016 and is on-going. Primary outcome is frequency of adverse events, particularly related to cardiovascular compromise and neurological sequelae. Secondary outcomes focus on clinical, biochemical, and physiological measures related to assessment of severity of dehydration, and response to treatment by intravenous rehydration.
Results from this pilot will contribute to generating robust definitions of outcomes (in particular for non-mortality endpoints) for a larger Phase III trial.
世界卫生组织(WHO)针对患有急性胃肠炎(AGE)和重度脱水儿童的补液管理指南(C方案)在资源匮乏地区广泛应用,但从未在临床试验中得到正式评估。最近对肯尼亚基利菲县医院AGE患儿结局的一项审计指出,10%的儿童需要高度依赖护理(死亡率为20%),且一些患儿出现了与液体相关的并发症。在患有严重发热性疾病的非洲儿童中进行的液体复苏试验FEAST表明,液体推注疗法会导致更高的死亡率,并引发了对快速静脉补液疗法安全性的担忧。这些发现需要对儿童对补液疗法的反应进行详细的生理学研究,包括对心肌功能和血流动力学变化的量化。
GASTRO是一项多中心、非盲的II期随机对照试验,研究对象为120名年龄在2个月至12岁因AGE继发重度脱水而住院的儿童。排除患有严重营养不良、慢性腹泻和先天性/风湿性心脏病的儿童。这些儿童将在18个月内在肯尼亚和乌干达的3个中心入组,并随访至出院后7天。该试验将把儿童按1:1随机分为两组,一组采用乳酸林格氏液进行标准快速补液(WHO方案“C”——根据年龄在3 - 6小时内输注100毫升/千克,对于休克患儿额外给予0.9%生理盐水推注),另一组采用较慢的补液方案(8小时内输注100毫升/千克且不给予液体推注)。入组于2016年11月开始,目前仍在进行中。主要结局是不良事件的发生率,特别是与心血管功能不全和神经后遗症相关的事件。次要结局集中在与脱水严重程度评估以及静脉补液治疗反应相关的临床、生化和生理学指标上。
这项试点研究的结果将有助于为规模更大的III期试验生成关于结局(特别是非死亡终点)的可靠定义。