| Literature DB >> 30782694 |
Mutsa Bwakura-Dangarembizi1, Beatrice Amadi2, Claire D Bourke3, Ruairi C Robertson3, Benjamin Mwapenya4, Kanta Chandwe2, Chanda Kapoma2, Kapula Chifunda2, Florence Majo4, Deophine Ngosa2, Pamela Chakara4, Nivea Chulu2, Faithfull Masimba4, Idah Mapurisa4, Ellen Besa2, Kuda Mutasa4, Simutanyi Mwakamui2, Thompson Runodamoto4, Jean H Humphrey4, Robert Ntozini4, Jonathan C K Wells5, Amee R Manges6, Jonathan R Swann7, A Sarah Walker8, Kusum J Nathoo1, Paul Kelly2,3, Andrew J Prendergast3,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Mortality among children hospitalised for complicated severe acute malnutrition (SAM) remains high despite the implementation of WHO guidelines, particularly in settings of high HIV prevalence. Children continue to be at high risk of morbidity, mortality and relapse after discharge from hospital although long-term outcomes are not well documented. Better understanding the pathogenesis of SAM and the factors associated with poor outcomes may inform new therapeutic interventions. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The Health Outcomes, Pathogenesis and Epidemiology of Severe Acute Malnutrition (HOPE-SAM) study is a longitudinal observational cohort that aims to evaluate the short-term and long-term clinical outcomes of HIV-positive and HIV-negative children with complicated SAM, and to identify the risk factors at admission and discharge from hospital that independently predict poor outcomes. Children aged 0-59 months hospitalised for SAM are being enrolled at three tertiary hospitals in Harare, Zimbabwe and Lusaka, Zambia. Longitudinal mortality, morbidity and nutritional data are being collected at admission, discharge and for 48 weeks post discharge. Nested laboratory substudies are exploring the role of enteropathy, gut microbiota, metabolomics and cellular immune function in the pathogenesis of SAM using stool, urine and blood collected from participants and from well-nourished controls. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study is approved by the local and international institutional review boards in the participating countries (the Joint Research Ethics Committee of the University of Zimbabwe, Medical Research Council of Zimbabwe and University of Zambia Biomedical Research Ethics Committee) and the study sponsor (Queen Mary University of London). Caregivers provide written informed consent for each participant. Findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals, conference presentations and to caregivers at face-to-face meetings. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; HIV; enteropathy; malnutrition; microbiota; mortality
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30782694 PMCID: PMC6361330 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Study flow chart. All hospital admissions are screened for eligibility for the observational cohort and enteropathy substudy, with procedures undertaken as shown in the flow chart during hospitalisation and post discharge. Well-nourished children from outpatient clinics and the community meeting eligibility criteria as well-nourished controls are enrolled and undergo a single baseline assessment as shown. The immunology, microbiota and metabolomics substudies enrol children as shown. All children with severe acute malnutrition (SAM), regardless of which arm of the study they are enrolled into, are followed for 48 weeks post discharge. 1The immunology substudy started from 1 June 2017 and required children to have a blood sample >2 mL to conduct cellular assays. LM, lactulose-mannitol; WHZ, weight-for-height Z-score.
Enteropathy substudy groups
| Children aged 6–59 months | SAM* | Well-nourished controls | |
| Oedematous† | Non-oedematous | ||
| HIV-positive | n=50 | n=50 | n=100 |
| HIV-negative | n=50 | n=50 | n=100 |
Note that children below 6 months of age are excluded from the enteropathy substudy to avoid interrupting exclusive breast feeding during the lactulose-mannitol test.
*SAM defined according to WHO criteria.
†Presence of bilateral pitting pedal oedema.
SAM, severe acute malnutrition; WHZ, weight-for-height Z-score.
Summary of procedures in observational cohort
| Assessment | Hospitalisation | Post discharge* | |||||
| Baseline† | Discharge‡ | 2 weeks | 4 weeks | 12 weeks | 24 weeks | 48 weeks | |
| Caregiver informed consent to join observational cohort | x | ||||||
| Summary checklist | x | ||||||
| Locator information§ | x | ||||||
| Acute admission information | x | ||||||
| Baseline data | x | ||||||
| Daily clinical review¶ | Daily during hospitalisation | ||||||
| Blood collection** | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| HIV testing†† | x | ||||||
| CD4 count and viral load (HIV-infected children only) | x | x | x | x | |||
| Full blood count‡‡ | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| Anthropometry | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| Skinfold thickness§§ | x | x | x | x | x | x | |
| Body composition¶¶ | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| Discharge data collection | x | ||||||
| Daily morbidity diary | Daily during follow-up period by caregivers | ||||||
| Follow-up clinic: history, examination, morbidity and mortality data | x | x | x | x | x | ||
*Windows will be created around these post-discharge time-points to maximize follow-up for caregivers who miss visits or are unavailable, as follows: 2 weeks (optimal window from 1 week to 2 weeks + 6 days; allowable window up to 2 weeks + 6 days); 4 weeks (optimal window 3-5 weeks, allowable window up to 9 weeks + 6 days); 12 weeks (optimal window 10-14 weeks, allowable window up to 19 weeks + 6 days); 24 weeks (optimal window 20-28 weeks, allowable window up to 43 weeks + 6 days); 48 weeks (optimal window 44-52 weeks, allowable window up to 71 weeks + 6 days). †Children will be enrolled as soon as possible after hospitalisation and will undergo baseline investigations as soon as possible after enrolment. This is to provide a window of opportunity to time collection of research specimens with clinical specimens, and to ensure that the child is clinically stable before undertaking research investigations.
‡The discharge procedures will be undertaken on the day of discharge or as close as possible to that date.
§Locator information will be updated at subsequent visits if caregivers have moved or changed contact details.
¶A clinical review will be undertaken every day between admission and discharge by the study clinician.
**5.4 mL of blood (depending on child weight; amount will not exceed 2 mL/kg total over 2-week period) will be collected by a study nurse into endotoxin-free EDTA tubes. Samples will be used to store whole blood, Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMC) and plasma for subsequent measurement of C reactive protein and albumin. Where blood sample volumes allow (≥2 mL sample), bacterial binding assays and whole blood stimulations will be conducted and culture supernatants and cells stored for subsequent assessment of immune cell function at each time point. Study blood samples will not be collected from children with known haemoglobin <60g/L.
††HIV testing is conducted as part of routine clinical practice, but if it has not been undertaken, the study sample will be used to test for HIV, as stated in the informed consent form, since HIV status is required to allocate children to study groups.
‡‡Full blood count results will be transcribed from clinical records; if not done by clinical teams, the EDTA sample will be used to measure Full Blood Count (FBC) in clinical laboratories at each site.
§§Skinfold thickness (triceps, subscapular, supra-iliac) and mid-thigh circumference will be measured using Holtain callipers or tape measure.
¶¶Body composition will be assessed by bioimpedance vector analysis.
Summary of procedures for cases in the enteropathy substudy
| Assessment | Hospitalisation | Post discharge* | |||||
| Baseline† | Discharge‡ | 2 weeks | 4 weeks | 12 weeks | 24 weeks | 48 weeks | |
| Caregiver informed consent to join observational cohort and enteropathy substudy | X | ||||||
| Summary checklist | X | ||||||
| Locator information§ | X | ||||||
| Acute admission information | X | ||||||
| Baseline data | X | ||||||
| Daily clinical review¶ | Daily during hospitalisation | ||||||
| Blood collection** | X | X | X | X | X | ||
| HIV testing†† | X | ||||||
| CD4 count and viral load (HIV-infected children only) | X | X | X | X | |||
| Full blood count‡‡ | X | X | X | X | X | ||
| Gastric aspirate§§ | X | ||||||
| Stool collection¶¶ | X | X | X | X | X | ||
| Lactulose-mannitol testing*** | X | X | X | X | |||
| Anthropometry | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Skinfold thickness††† | X | X | X | X | X | X | |
| Body composition‡‡‡ | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Discharge data collection | X | ||||||
| Daily morbidity diary | Daily during follow-up period by caregivers | ||||||
| Follow-up clinic: history, examination, morbidity and mortality data | X | X | X | X | |||
*Windows will be created around these post-discharge time points to maximise follow-up for caregivers who miss visits or are unavailable, as follows: 2 weeks (1–3 weeks); 4 weeks (3–5 weeks); 12 weeks (10–14 weeks); 24 weeks (20–28 weeks) and 48 weeks (44–52 weeks).
†Children will be enrolled within 24 hours of hospitalisation and will undergo baseline investigations within 72 hours of hospitalisation. This is to provide a window of opportunity to time collection of research specimens with clinical specimens, and to ensure that the child is clinically stable before undertaking research investigations.
‡The discharge procedures will be undertaken on the day of discharge or as close as possible to that date.
§Locator information will updated at subsequent visits if caregivers have moved or changed contact details.
¶Daily clinical review will be conducted every day between admission and discharge by the study clinician.
**During hospitalisation, 5.4 mL of blood (depending on child weight; amount will not exceed 2 mL/kg total over 2-week period) will be collected by a study nurse into a 2.7 mL endotoxin-free EDTA tube and a 2.7 mL PAXGene tube, for subsequent isolation of RNA and gene expression analysis. After discharge (weeks 12, 24 and 48), 5.4 mL of blood (depending on child weight; amount will not exceed 2 mL/kg total over 2-week period) will be collected by a study nurse into two 2.7 mL endotoxin-free EDTA tubes.
††HIV testing is conducted as part of routine clinical practice, but if it has not been undertaken, the study sample will be used to test for HIV (see section 9.4), as stated in the informed consent form, since HIV status is required to allocate children to study groups.
‡‡Full blood count results will be transcribed from clinical records; if not done by clinical teams, the EDTA sample will be used to measure FBC in clinical laboratories at each site.
§§A gastric juice sample will be collected at the same time as the blood draw by aspirating the nasogastric tube with a sterile feeding syringe, to test for gastric pH; sterile water or saline will then be instilled and a sample of gastric juice collected for storage for subsequent PCR and culture (section 7.5.2).
¶¶Stool collection will be undertaken at the same time as the blood draw.
***Lactulose-mannitol (LM) testing will be conducted, with collection of a baseline urine sample, followed by a 2-hour urine collection post-LM ingestion. This test will be deferred until children are judged to be clinically stable by the study physician during daily reviews. In general, this will be a child in the nutritional rehabilitation phase, who has no cardiorespiratory compromise.
†††Skinfold thickness (triceps, subscapular, supra-iliac) and mid-thigh circumference will be measured using Holtain callipers or tape measure.
‡‡‡Body composition will be assessed by bioimpedance vector analysis.