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The World Health Organization ACTION-I (Antenatal CorTicosteroids for Improving Outcomes in preterm Newborns) Trial: a multi-country, multi-centre, two-arm, parallel, double-blind, placebo-controlled, individually randomized trial of antenatal corticosteroids for women at risk of imminent birth in the early preterm period in hospitals in low-resource countries

Authors :
Michael Abiola Okunlola
Hugo Gamerro
Adedapo Babatunde Anibaba Ande
Mohammad Tarek Azad
Zahida Qureshi
Begum Nasrin
Sumia Bari
Janna Patterson
Khalid Yunis
Gulshan Ara
Adesina Lawrence Akintan
Manjunath S. Somannavar
Geetanjali Katageri
Soofia Khatoon
Shazia Memon
Olubukola A. Adesina
Omotayo Adesiyun
Preeti Patil
Raheel Sikander
Saima Zulfiqar
Rasmita S. Nayak
Rasheda Khanam
Olorunfemi Oludele Owa
Olateju Eyinade Kudirat
Aboyeji Abiodun Peter
Adebanjo Babalola Adeyemi
Veena Herekar
Adejumoke I. Ayede
Faiza Nassir
Odiah Violet
Salahuddin Ahmed
Adelaide Barassa
Adetokunbo Fabamwo
Madhusmita J. Pradhan
Dilip Kumar Bhowmik
Meagan Harrison
Alfred Osoti
Shahana Ferdous Choudhury
Oluwakemi Funmilola Ashubu
Fredrick Were
Francis Bola Akinkunmi
M. M. Patil
Sadia Zulfiqar
Waweru Salome
Hafsa Mohamed
Mojibur Rahman
Harish Chellani
Adegoke Gbadegesin Falade
Elizabeth Disu
Probhat Ranjan Dey
Sujata S. Misra
Anthony Dennis Isah
Bankole Peter Kuti
Liana Campodonico
Saleha Begum Chowdhury
Olusanya Abiodun
Sangappa M. Dhaded
Shaheen Akter
Bukola Fawole
Olufemi M. Omololu
Mrityunjay C Metgud
Anjuman Ara
Sangamesh Mathpati
M. A. Matin
Aloysius Ebedi
Saumya S. Nanda
Umesh Ramdurg
Lumaan Sheikh
Bernard Gwer
Grace Ochieng
Ireti Patricia Eniowo
Vishwanath L. Machakanur
Gilda Piaggio
Nazma Begum
Guillermo Carroli
Jamal Anwar
Ejinkeonye I. Kate
Murshed Ahmed Chowdhury
Kidza Mugerwa
Zainab Imam
John Kinuthia
Saima Sultana
Abdus Sabur
Mubarak Ali
Ebunoluwa A. Adejuyigbe
Shruti S. Andola
Shabina Ariff
A Metin Gülmezoglu
Bernadine Lusweti
Daniel Giordano
Farida Yasmin
Ashalata A. Mallapur
Olusola Comfort Famurewa
James Neilson
Mohammad Abdul Mannan
Shazia Rani
Sumangala Math
Sunil S Vernekar
Lucy Das
Bhavana B. Lakhkar
Nayarit Mohamed
Mokuolu Olugbenga
Hadiza Abdulaziz Idris
Omolayo Adebukola Olubosede
Shivaprasad Goudar
Joshua P. Vogel
My Huong Nguyen
George Gwako
Wilfred Sanni
Shailaja R. Bidri
Lawal Oyeneyin
Elizabeth Molyneux
Sajid Soofi
Joachim Ogindo
Rajiv Bahl
Salma Sheikh
Ikechukwu Okonkwo
Abdullah H. Baqui
Henry Chineme Anyabolu
Mohammod Shahidullah
Shailaja Bidri
Ekwem Lilian Osaretin
Maya Padhi
Olugbenga Runsewe
Akintunde Olusegun Fehintola
Yeshita V. Pujar
Bhuvaneshwari C. Yelamali
Fatima Ali Sallau
Oluwafemi Kuti
Fernando Althabe
Leena B. Das
Nida Najimi
Okoli Chinyere Viola
Muttu R. Gudadinni
Olabanke Rosena Oluwafemi
Frederick Were
Ibraheem Olayemi Awowole
Sujata Misra
Ramesh Pol
Olabisi Florence Dedeke
Njoroge John Githua
Olubunmi Busari
Sajid Bashir Soofi
Ahmed Laving
Shivaprasad S. Goudar
Girija Shankar G. Mohanty
Theresa Azonima Irinyenikan
Bipsha S. Singh
Olufemi T Oladapo
Ebunoluwa Aderonke Adejuyigbe
Source :
Trials, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2019), Trials
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
BMC, 2019.

Abstract

Background Antenatal corticosteroids (ACS) have long been regarded as a cornerstone intervention in mitigating the adverse effects of a preterm birth. However, the safety and efficacy of ACS in hospitals in low-resource countries has not been established in an efficacy trial despite their widespread use. Findings of a large cluster-randomized trial in six low- and middle-income countries showed that efforts to scale up ACS use in low-resource settings can lead to harm. There is equipoise regarding the benefits and harms of ACS use in hospitals in low-resource countries. This randomized controlled trial aims to determine whether ACS are safe and efficacious when given to women at risk of imminent birth in the early preterm period, in hospitals in low-resource countries. Methods/design The trial design is a parallel, two-arm, double-blind, individually randomized, placebo-controlled trial of ACS (dexamethasone) for women at risk of imminent preterm birth. The trial will recruit 6018 women in participating hospitals across five low-resource countries (Bangladesh, India, Kenya, Nigeria and Pakistan). The primary objectives are to compare the efficacy of dexamethasone with placebo on survival of the baby and maternal infectious morbidity. The primary outcomes are: 1) neonatal death (to 28 completed days of life); 2) any baby death (any stillbirth postrandomization or neonatal death); and 3) a composite outcome to assess possible maternal bacterial infections. The trial will recruit eligible, consenting pregnant women from 26 weeks 0 days to 33 weeks 6 days gestation with confirmed live fetuses, in whom birth is planned or expected within 48 h. The intervention comprises a regimen of intramuscular dexamethasone sodium phosphate. The comparison is an identical placebo regimen (normal saline). A total of 6018 women will be recruited to detect a reduction of 15% or more in neonatal deaths in a two-sided 5% significance test with 90% power (including 10% loss to follow-up). Discussion Findings of this trial will guide clinicians, programme managers and policymakers on the safety and efficacy of ACS in hospitals in low-resource countries. The trial findings will inform updating of the World Health Organization’s global recommendations on ACS use. Trial registration ACTRN12617000476336. Registered on 31 March 2017. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s13063-019-3488-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17456215
Volume :
20
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Trials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5b29c791dae89ab14d575eb627ef1efe
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-019-3488-z