King Sarah, D'Mello-Guyett Lauren, Yakowenko Ellyn, Riems Bram, Gallandat Karin, Mama Chabi Sherifath, Mohamud Feysal Abdisalan, Ayoub Khamisa, Olad Ahmed Hersi, Aliou Bagayogo, Marshak Anastasia, Trehan Indi, Cumming Oliver, Stobaugh Heather
Action Against Hunger, New York, NY, USA.
Environmental Health Group, Department for Disease Control, Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
BMC Nutr. 2022 Aug 24;8(1):90. doi: 10.1186/s40795-022-00576-x.
The Community-Based Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) model transformed the treatment of severe acute malnutrition (SAM) by shifting treatment from inpatient facilities to the community. Evidence shows that while CMAM programs are effective in the initial recovery from SAM, recovery is not sustained for some children requiring them to receive treatment repeatedly. This indicates a potential gap in the model, yet little evidence is available on the incidence of relapse, the determinants of the phenomena, or its financial implications on program delivery.
This study is a multi-country prospective cohort study following "post-SAM" children (defined as children following anthropometric recovery from SAM through treatment in CMAM) and matched community controls (defined as children not previously experiencing acute malnutrition (AM)) monthly for six months. The aim is to assess the burden and determinants of relapse to SAM. This study design enables the quantification of relapse among post-SAM children, but also to determine the relative risk for, and excess burden of, AM between post-SAM children and their matched community controls. Individual -, household-, and community-level information will be analyzed to identify potential risk-factors for relapse, with a focus on associations between water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) related exposures, and post-discharge outcomes. The study combines a microbiological assessment of post-SAM children's drinking water, food, stool via rectal swabs, dried blood spots (DBS), and assess for indicators of enteric pathogens and immune function, to explore different exposures and potential associations with treatment and post-treatment outcomes.
This study is the first of its kind to systematically track children after recovery from SAM in CMAM programs using uniform methods across multiple countries. The design allows the use of results to: 1) facilitate understandings of the burden of relapse; 2) identify risk factors for relapse and 3) elucidate financial costs associated with relapse in CMAM programs. This protocol's publication aims to support similar studies and evaluations of CMAM programs and provides opportunities for comparability of an evidence-based set of indicators for relapse to SAM.
基于社区的急性营养不良管理(CMAM)模式通过将治疗从住院设施转移到社区,改变了重度急性营养不良(SAM)的治疗方式。有证据表明,虽然CMAM项目在SAM的初始康复中有效,但一些需要反复接受治疗的儿童无法维持康复状态。这表明该模式存在潜在差距,但关于复发率、该现象的决定因素或其对项目实施的财务影响的证据很少。
本研究是一项多国前瞻性队列研究,对“SAM康复后”儿童(定义为通过CMAM治疗从SAM实现人体测量康复的儿童)和匹配的社区对照儿童(定义为以前未经历过急性营养不良(AM)的儿童)每月进行为期六个月的跟踪。目的是评估复发至SAM的负担和决定因素。该研究设计能够量化SAM康复后儿童的复发情况,还能确定SAM康复后儿童与其匹配的社区对照儿童之间AM的相对风险和额外负担。将分析个人、家庭和社区层面的信息,以确定复发的潜在风险因素,重点是水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WASH)相关暴露与出院后结果之间的关联。该研究结合了对SAM康复后儿童的饮用水、食物、通过直肠拭子采集的粪便、干血斑(DBS)进行微生物评估,并评估肠道病原体和免疫功能指标,以探索不同暴露以及与治疗和治疗后结果的潜在关联。
本研究是同类研究中首个在多个国家使用统一方法对CMAM项目中从SAM康复后的儿童进行系统跟踪的研究。该设计允许利用研究结果:1)促进对复发负担的理解;2)确定复发的风险因素;3)阐明CMAM项目中与复发相关的财务成本。本方案的发表旨在支持对CMAM项目的类似研究和评估,并为一套基于证据的SAM复发指标的可比性提供机会。