Department of Nutrition, Institute for Global Nutrition, University of California Davis, Davis, California, USA
Department of Nutrition, Institute for Global Nutrition, University of California Davis, Davis, California, USA.
BMJ Open. 2020 Feb 13;10(2):e036539. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-036539.
Diagnosis of infantile thiamine deficiency disorders (TDD) is challenging due to the non-specific, highly variable clinical presentation, often leading to misdiagnosis. Our primary objective is to develop a case definition for thiamine responsive disorders (TRD) to determine among hospitalised infants and young children, which clinical features and risk factors identify those who respond positively to thiamine administration.
This prospective study will enrol 662 children (aged 21 days to <18 months) seeking treatment for TDD symptoms. Children will be treated with intravenous or intramuscular thiamine (100 mg daily for a minimum of 3 days) alongside other interventions deemed appropriate. Baseline assessments, prior to thiamine administration, include a physical examination, echocardiogram and venous blood draw for the determination of thiamine biomarkers. Follow-up assessments include physical examinations (after 4, 8, 12, 24, 36, 48 and 72 hours), echocardiogram (after 24 and 48 hours) and one cranial ultrasound. During the hospital stay, maternal blood and breast-milk samples and diet, health, anthropometric and socio-demographic information will be collected for mother-child pairs. Using these data, a panel of expert paediatricians will determine TRD status for use as the dependent variable in logistic regression models. Models identifying predictors of TRD will be developed and validated for various scenarios. Clinical prediction model performance will be quantified by empirical area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, using resampling cross validation. A frequency-matched community-based cohort of mother-child pairs (n=265) will serve as comparison group for evaluation of potential risk factors for TRD.
Ethical approval has been obtained from The National Ethics Committee for Health Research, Ministry of Health, Lao PDR and the Institutional Review Board of the University of California Davis. The results will be disseminated via scientific articles, presentations and workshops with representatives of the Ministry of Health.
NCT03626337.
由于婴儿硫胺素缺乏症(TDD)的临床表现非特异性且高度多变,常常导致误诊,因此其诊断颇具挑战。我们的主要目标是制定硫胺素反应性障碍(TRD)的病例定义,以确定在住院的婴儿和幼儿中,哪些临床特征和危险因素可识别出对硫胺素治疗有积极反应的患者。
本前瞻性研究将纳入 662 名(年龄 21 天至<18 个月)因 TDD 症状寻求治疗的儿童。患儿将接受静脉或肌肉注射硫胺素(每天 100mg,至少 3 天),并同时接受其他认为适当的干预措施。在给予硫胺素之前进行基线评估,包括体格检查、超声心动图和静脉血样以测定硫胺素生物标志物。随访评估包括体格检查(给予硫胺素后 4、8、12、24、36、48 和 72 小时)、超声心动图(给予硫胺素后 24 和 48 小时)和一次头颅超声检查。在住院期间,将收集母婴对的母亲血液和母乳样本以及饮食、健康、人体测量和社会人口学信息。利用这些数据,一组专家儿科医生将确定 TRD 状态,用作逻辑回归模型的因变量。将为各种情况开发和验证预测 TRD 的模型。通过经验性接受者操作特征曲线下面积的重采样交叉验证来量化临床预测模型的性能。一个频率匹配的母婴对(n=265)社区为基础的队列将作为 TRD 潜在危险因素评估的对照组。
老挝人民民主共和国卫生部国家伦理委员会和加利福尼亚大学戴维斯分校机构审查委员会已批准本研究。结果将通过科学文章、演示文稿和与卫生部代表的研讨会进行传播。
NCT03626337。