Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Lancet Infect Dis. Zinc as adjunct treatment in infants aged between 7 and 120 days with probable serious bacterial infection: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Lancet Infect Dis. Zinc as adjunct treatment in infants aged between 7 and 120 days with probable serious bacterial infection: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

    [Source: The Lancet Infect Dis., full page: (LINK). Abstract, edited.]
    The Lancet, Early Online Publication, 31 May 2012

    doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60477-2

    Zinc as adjunct treatment in infants aged between 7 and 120 days with probable serious bacterial infection: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial


    Original Text

    Prof Shinjini Bhatnagar PhD, Nitya Wadhwa MD, Prof Satinder Aneja MD, Rakesh Lodha MD, Prof Sushil Kumar Kabra MD, Uma Chandra Mouli Natchu MD, Prof Halvor Sommerfelt PhD, Prof Ashok Kumar Dutta MD, Prof Jagdish Chandra MD, Prof Bimbadhar Rath MD, Mamta Sharma MD, Vinod Kumar Sharma MD, Mohini Kumari MD, Tor A Strand PhD



    Summary

    Background

    Serious bacterial infections are a major cause of death in early infancy in developing countries. Inexpensive and accessible interventions that can add to the effect of standard antibiotic treatment could reduce infant mortality. We measured the effect of zinc as an adjunct to antibiotics in infants with probable serious bacterial infection.


    Methods

    In this randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, we enrolled infants aged 7?120 days with probable serious bacterial infection at three hospitals in New Delhi, India, between July 6, 2005, and Dec 3, 2008. With computer-generated sequences, we randomly assigned infants in permuted blocks of six, stratified by whether patients were underweight or had diarrhoea at enrolment, to receive either 10 mg of zinc or placebo orally every day in addition to standard antibiotic treatment. The primary outcome was treatment failure, which was defined as a need to change antibiotics within 7 days of randomisation, or a need for intensive care, or death at any time within 21 days. Participants and investigators were masked to treatment allocation. All analyses were done by intention-to-treat. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00347386.


    Findings

    352 infants were randomly assigned to receive zinc and 348 to placebo. 332 given zinc and 323 given placebo could be assessed for treatment failure. Significantly fewer treatment failures occurred in the zinc group (34 [10%]) than in the placebo group (55 [17%]; relative risk reduction 40%, 95% CI 10?60, p=0?0113; absolute risk reduction 6?8%, 1?5?12?0, p=0?0111). Treatment of 15 (95% CI eight to 67) infants with zinc would prevent one treatment failure. Ten infants receiving zinc died compared with 17 given placebo (relative risk 0?57, 0?27?1?23, p=0?15).


    Interpretation

    Zinc could be given as adjunct treatment to reduce the risk of treatment failure in infants aged 7?120 days with probable serious bacterial infection.


    Funding


    Department of Biotechnology, Government of India; the European Commission; the Meltzer Foundation; and the Research Council of Norway.
    -
    ------
Working...
X