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Título : Chloramphenicol versus ampicillin plus gentamicin for community acquired very severe pneumonia among children aged 2-59 months in low resource settings: Multicentre randomised controlled trial (SPEAR study)
Creador: Asghar Rai
Nivel de acceso: Open access
Palabras clave : Ampicilina - administración y dosificación
Cloramfenicol - administración y dosificación
Paises en desarrollo
Gentamicinas - administración y dosificación
Neumonía bacteriana - quimioterapia
Ampicillin - administration & dosage
Chloramphenicol - administration & dosage
Developing Countries
Gentamicins - administration & dosage
Pneumonia, Bacterial - drug therapy
Cloramfenicol
Ampicilina
Neumonia
Cloramphenicol
Ampicillin
Pneumonia
Descripción : Objective: To evaluate whether five days' treatment with injectable ampicillin plus gentamicin compared with chloramphenicol reduces treatment failure in children aged 2-59 months with community acquired very severe pneumonia in low resource settings. Design: Open label randomised controlled trial. Setting: Inpatient wards within tertiary care hospitals in Bangladesh, Ecuador, India, Mexico, Pakistan, Yemen, and Zambia. Participants: Children aged 2-59 months with WHO defined very severe pneumonia. Intervention: Chloramphenicol versus a combination of ampicillin plus gentamicin. Main outcome measures: Primary outcome measure was treatment failure at five days. Secondary outcomes were treatment failure defined similarly among all participants evaluated at 48 hours and at 10 and 21 days. Results: More children failed treatment with chloramphenicol at day 5 (16% v 11%; relative risk 1.43, 95% confidence interval 1.03 to 1.97) and also by days 10 and 21. Overall, 112 bacterial isolates were obtained from blood and lung aspirates in 110 children (11.5%), with the most common organisms being Staphylococcus aureus (n=47) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (n=22). In subgroup analysis, bacteraemia with any organism increased the risk of treatment failure at 21 days in the chloramphenicol group (2.09, 1.41 to 3.10) but not in the ampicillin plus gentamicin group (1.12, 0.59 to 2.13). Similarly, isolation of S pneumoniae increased the risk of treatment failure at day 21 (4.06, 2.73 to 6.03) and death (5.80, 2.62 to 12.85) in the chloramphenicol group but not in the ampicillin plus gentamicin group. No difference was found in treatment failure for children with S aureus bacteraemia in the two groups, but the power to detect a difference in this subgroup analysis was low. Independent predictors of treatment failure by multivariate analysis were hypoxaemia (oxygen saturation <90%), receiving chloramphenicol, being female, and poor immunisation status. Conclusion: Injectable ampicillin plus gentamicin is superior to injectable chloramphenicol for the treatment of community acquired very severe pneumonia in children aged 2-59 months in low resource settings. Trial registration: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN39543942.
Colaborador(es) u otros Autores: Salem Banajeh
professor
Josefina Egas
microbiologist
Patricia Hibberd
professor
Imran Iqbal
professor
Mary Katep-Bwalya
consultant
Zafarullah Kundi
FRCP professor
Paul Law
associate professor
William MacLeod
assistant professor
Irene Maulen-Radovan
professor
Greta Mino
professor
Samir Saha
professor
Fernando Sempertegui
director
Jonathon Simon
director
Mathuram Santosham
professor
Sunit Singhi
professor
Donald M Thea
professor
Shamim Qazi
Fecha de publicación : 2008
Tipo de publicación: Artículo
Formato: pdf
Identificador del Recurso : 10.1136/bmj.39421.435949.BE
Fuente: BMJ 336(7635):80 - 84
URI : http://repositorio.pediatria.gob.mx:8180/handle/20.500.12103/2172
Idioma: eng
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