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Zinc as an adjunct therapy in the management of severe pneumonia among Gambian children: randomized controlled trial

BACKGROUND: The benefit of zinc as an adjunct therapy for severe pneumonia is not established. We assessed the benefit of adjunct zinc therapy for severe pneumonia in children and determined whether the study children were zinc deficient. METHODS: This was a randomized, parallel group, double-blind,...

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Autores principales: Howie, Stephen, Bottomley, Christian, Chimah, Osaretin, Ideh, Readon, Ebruke, Bernard, Okomo, Uduak, Onyeama, Charles, Donkor, Simon, Rodrigues, Onike, Tapgun, Mary, Janneh, Marie, Oluwalana, Claire, Kuti, Bankole, Enwere, Godwin, Esangbedo, Pamela, Doherty, Conor, Mackenzie, Grant, Greenwood, Brian, Corrah, Tumani, Prentice, Andrew, Adegbola, Richard, Zaman, Syed
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Edinburgh University Global Health Society 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5908397/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29713463
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.08.010418
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author Howie, Stephen
Bottomley, Christian
Chimah, Osaretin
Ideh, Readon
Ebruke, Bernard
Okomo, Uduak
Onyeama, Charles
Donkor, Simon
Rodrigues, Onike
Tapgun, Mary
Janneh, Marie
Oluwalana, Claire
Kuti, Bankole
Enwere, Godwin
Esangbedo, Pamela
Doherty, Conor
Mackenzie, Grant
Greenwood, Brian
Corrah, Tumani
Prentice, Andrew
Adegbola, Richard
Zaman, Syed
author_facet Howie, Stephen
Bottomley, Christian
Chimah, Osaretin
Ideh, Readon
Ebruke, Bernard
Okomo, Uduak
Onyeama, Charles
Donkor, Simon
Rodrigues, Onike
Tapgun, Mary
Janneh, Marie
Oluwalana, Claire
Kuti, Bankole
Enwere, Godwin
Esangbedo, Pamela
Doherty, Conor
Mackenzie, Grant
Greenwood, Brian
Corrah, Tumani
Prentice, Andrew
Adegbola, Richard
Zaman, Syed
author_sort Howie, Stephen
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The benefit of zinc as an adjunct therapy for severe pneumonia is not established. We assessed the benefit of adjunct zinc therapy for severe pneumonia in children and determined whether the study children were zinc deficient. METHODS: This was a randomized, parallel group, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial with an allocation ratio of 1:1 conducted in children with severe pneumonia to evaluate the efficacy of daily zinc as an adjunct treatment in preventing ‘treatment failure’ (presence of any sign of severe pneumonia) on day-5 and day-10 and in reducing the time to resolution of signs of severe pneumonia. Six hundred and four children 2-59 months of age presenting with severe pneumonia at six urban and rural health care facilities in The Gambia were individually randomised to receive placebo (n = 301) or zinc (n = 303) for seven days. To determine if the study children were zinc deficient, supplementation was continued in a randomly selected subgroup of 121 children from each arm for six months post-enrolment, and height-gain, nutritional status, plasma zinc concentrations, and immune competence were compared. RESULTS: Percentage of treatment failure were similar in placebo and zinc arms both on day 5 (14.0% vs 14.1%) and day 10 (5.2% vs 5.9%). The time to recovery from lower chest wall indrawing and sternal retraction was longer in the placebo compared to zinc arm (24.4 vs 23.0 hours; P = 0.011 and 18.7 vs 11.0 hours; P = 0.006 respectively). The time to resolution for all respiratory symptoms of severity was not significantly different between placebo and zinc arms (42.3 vs 30.9 hours respectively; P = 0.242). In the six months follow-up sub-group, there was no significant difference in height gain, height-for-age and weight-for-height Z-scores, mid upper arm circumference, plasma zinc concentrations, and anergy at six months post-enrolment. CONCLUSIONS: In this population, zinc given as an adjunct treatment for severe pneumonia showed no benefit in treatment failure rates, or clinically important benefit in time to recovery from respiratory symptoms and showed marginal benefit in rapidity of resolution of some signs of severity. This finding does not support routine use of zinc as an adjunct treatment in severe pneumonia in generally zinc replete children. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN33548493.
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spelling pubmed-59083972018-04-30 Zinc as an adjunct therapy in the management of severe pneumonia among Gambian children: randomized controlled trial Howie, Stephen Bottomley, Christian Chimah, Osaretin Ideh, Readon Ebruke, Bernard Okomo, Uduak Onyeama, Charles Donkor, Simon Rodrigues, Onike Tapgun, Mary Janneh, Marie Oluwalana, Claire Kuti, Bankole Enwere, Godwin Esangbedo, Pamela Doherty, Conor Mackenzie, Grant Greenwood, Brian Corrah, Tumani Prentice, Andrew Adegbola, Richard Zaman, Syed J Glob Health Articles BACKGROUND: The benefit of zinc as an adjunct therapy for severe pneumonia is not established. We assessed the benefit of adjunct zinc therapy for severe pneumonia in children and determined whether the study children were zinc deficient. METHODS: This was a randomized, parallel group, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial with an allocation ratio of 1:1 conducted in children with severe pneumonia to evaluate the efficacy of daily zinc as an adjunct treatment in preventing ‘treatment failure’ (presence of any sign of severe pneumonia) on day-5 and day-10 and in reducing the time to resolution of signs of severe pneumonia. Six hundred and four children 2-59 months of age presenting with severe pneumonia at six urban and rural health care facilities in The Gambia were individually randomised to receive placebo (n = 301) or zinc (n = 303) for seven days. To determine if the study children were zinc deficient, supplementation was continued in a randomly selected subgroup of 121 children from each arm for six months post-enrolment, and height-gain, nutritional status, plasma zinc concentrations, and immune competence were compared. RESULTS: Percentage of treatment failure were similar in placebo and zinc arms both on day 5 (14.0% vs 14.1%) and day 10 (5.2% vs 5.9%). The time to recovery from lower chest wall indrawing and sternal retraction was longer in the placebo compared to zinc arm (24.4 vs 23.0 hours; P = 0.011 and 18.7 vs 11.0 hours; P = 0.006 respectively). The time to resolution for all respiratory symptoms of severity was not significantly different between placebo and zinc arms (42.3 vs 30.9 hours respectively; P = 0.242). In the six months follow-up sub-group, there was no significant difference in height gain, height-for-age and weight-for-height Z-scores, mid upper arm circumference, plasma zinc concentrations, and anergy at six months post-enrolment. CONCLUSIONS: In this population, zinc given as an adjunct treatment for severe pneumonia showed no benefit in treatment failure rates, or clinically important benefit in time to recovery from respiratory symptoms and showed marginal benefit in rapidity of resolution of some signs of severity. This finding does not support routine use of zinc as an adjunct treatment in severe pneumonia in generally zinc replete children. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN33548493. Edinburgh University Global Health Society 2018-06 2018-04-19 /pmc/articles/PMC5908397/ /pubmed/29713463 http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.08.010418 Text en Copyright © 2018 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Articles
Howie, Stephen
Bottomley, Christian
Chimah, Osaretin
Ideh, Readon
Ebruke, Bernard
Okomo, Uduak
Onyeama, Charles
Donkor, Simon
Rodrigues, Onike
Tapgun, Mary
Janneh, Marie
Oluwalana, Claire
Kuti, Bankole
Enwere, Godwin
Esangbedo, Pamela
Doherty, Conor
Mackenzie, Grant
Greenwood, Brian
Corrah, Tumani
Prentice, Andrew
Adegbola, Richard
Zaman, Syed
Zinc as an adjunct therapy in the management of severe pneumonia among Gambian children: randomized controlled trial
title Zinc as an adjunct therapy in the management of severe pneumonia among Gambian children: randomized controlled trial
title_full Zinc as an adjunct therapy in the management of severe pneumonia among Gambian children: randomized controlled trial
title_fullStr Zinc as an adjunct therapy in the management of severe pneumonia among Gambian children: randomized controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Zinc as an adjunct therapy in the management of severe pneumonia among Gambian children: randomized controlled trial
title_short Zinc as an adjunct therapy in the management of severe pneumonia among Gambian children: randomized controlled trial
title_sort zinc as an adjunct therapy in the management of severe pneumonia among gambian children: randomized controlled trial
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5908397/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29713463
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.08.010418
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