Amza Abdou, Kadri Boubacar, Nassirou Beido, Arzika Ahmed M, Austin Ariana, Nyatigo Fanice, Lebas Elodie, Arnold Benjamin F, Lietman Thomas M, Oldenburg Catherine E
Programme National de Santé Oculaire, Ministere de la Santé Publique, Niamey, Niger.
Centre de Recherche et d'Intervention en Santé Publique, Niamey, Niger.
BMC Ophthalmol. 2021 Jan 6;21(1):15. doi: 10.1186/s12886-020-01776-4.
The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends annual mass azithromycin distribution until districts drop below 5% prevalence of trachomatous inflammation-follicular (TF). Districts with very low TF prevalence may have little or no transmission of the ocular strains of Chlamydia trachomatis that cause trachoma, and additional rounds of mass azithromycin distribution may not be useful. Here, we describe the protocol for a randomized controlled trial designed to evaluate whether mass azithromycin distribution can be stopped prior to the current WHO guidelines.
The Azithromycin Reduction to Reach Elimination of Trachoma (ARRET) study is a 1:1 community randomized non-inferiority trial designed to evaluate whether mass azithromycin distribution can be stopped in districts with baseline prevalence of TF under 20%. Communities in Maradi, Niger are randomized after baseline assessment either to continued annual mass azithromycin distribution or stopping annual azithromycin distribution over a 3-year period. We will compare the prevalence of ocular C. trachomatis (primary outcome), TF and other clinical signs of trachoma, and serologic markers of trachoma after 3 years. We hypothesize that stopping annual azithromycin distribution will be non-inferior to continued annual azithromycin distributions for all markers of trachoma prevalence and transmission.
The results of this trial are anticipated to provide potentially guideline-changing evidence for when mass azithromycin distributions can be stopped in low TF prevalence areas. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: This study is registered at clinicaltrials.gov ( NCT04185402 ). Registered December 4, 2019; prospectively registered pre-results.
世界卫生组织(WHO)建议每年进行一次阿奇霉素大规模分发,直到沙眼衣原体滤泡性炎症(TF)患病率降至5%以下的地区。TF患病率极低的地区可能很少或根本没有导致沙眼的沙眼衣原体眼部菌株传播,额外轮次的阿奇霉素大规模分发可能没有用处。在此,我们描述了一项随机对照试验的方案,旨在评估是否可以在世卫组织现行指南之前停止阿奇霉素大规模分发。
阿奇霉素减少以实现沙眼消除(ARRET)研究是一项1:1社区随机非劣效性试验,旨在评估在TF基线患病率低于20%的地区是否可以停止阿奇霉素大规模分发。在基线评估后,尼日尔马拉迪的社区被随机分为继续每年进行阿奇霉素大规模分发或在3年内停止每年的阿奇霉素分发。我们将比较3年后眼部沙眼衣原体的患病率(主要结局)、TF和其他沙眼临床体征以及沙眼血清学标志物。我们假设停止每年的阿奇霉素分发对于沙眼患病率和传播的所有标志物而言不劣于继续每年进行阿奇霉素分发。
预计该试验结果将为低TF患病率地区何时可以停止阿奇霉素大规模分发提供可能改变指南的证据。试验注册号:本研究已在clinicaltrials.gov注册(NCT04185402)。2019年12月4日注册;前瞻性注册,结果未出。