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Advancing Access to Diagnostic Innovation Essential for UHC and AMR Prevention (Accelerator)

F

Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Acute Febrile Illness

Treatments

Other: diagnostic algorithm+Point of care rapid diagnostic tests+ Behavior change ( assessed together as a single package of interventions)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims to evaluate clinical outcomes and antibiotic prescription patterns following the use of diagnostic algorithms, point of care (PoC) rapid diagnostic tests, and behaviour change interventions in cases of acute febrile illnesses in children, adolescents and adults presenting at out patient clinics in lower and middle income countries. The study is to be implemented in 2 phases- the first run from 2020 to 2021 and the 2nd phase from 2021 to 2022 to include COVID-19 PoCTs.

Full description

Background and rationale. 'Just-in-case' antibiotic prescribing practices is one of the causes of inadequate management of 'acute febrile illnesses' and AMR in Low- and Middle-income Countries (LMICs). At the same time, some people who would require antibiotic treatment do not get it. An improvement in case management and prescription practice might lead to a decrease in morbidity and mortality. Success will mean making significant steps toward achieving the dual goal of improving UHC and tackling AMR.

The PICO question addressed is: in children/ adolescents and adults (Population) presenting to outpatient clinics / peripheral health centres in LMICs with acute febrile illness/Respiratory Tract Infection can a combination of available PoC rapid diagnostic tests, diagnostic aids/algorithms, clinic process flow and, training and communication (Intervention) improve management of acute febrile illnesses and better target the use of antibiotics / reduce unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions (Outcomes) compared to current practice (Control)?

Primary objective(s).

To evaluate the impact of a package of interventions (point of care [PoC] tests, clinical algorithm, clinic process flow, training and communication tools) on clinical outcomes and antibiotic prescriptions, with standard-of-care practices, in children and adolescents presenting with acute febrile illnesses (defined as fever with no focus or Respiratory Tract Infection lasting for no more than 7 days), at outpatient clinics.

Secondary objective(s)

  1. To improve the management of acute febrile illness
  2. To promote rational and targeted use of antibiotics for acute febrile illness
  3. To determine the aetiology of fever in patients presenting to outpatient facilities using available PoC diagnostic tests
  4. To study the safety and feasibility of a package of interventions compared to current practice of care
  5. To assess the effectiveness of training and communication tools to adherence to the prescribed treatment

Primary endpoints

  1. Proportion of outpatient cases of acute febrile illness with favourable outcome (defined as being alive and asymptomatic).

  2. antibiotic prescriptions rates for acute febrile illness in the clinic Secondary endpoints (outcomes) 1. Duration of time spent in the clinic

  3. Proportion of patients treated for specific bacterial infection 3. Proportion of patients with disease specific diagnosis identified by PoC tests 4. Frequency of serious adverse event (SAE) within 7 days of recruitment 5. Frequency of unscheduled (unplanned) visit within 7 days of recruitment 6. Training and communication package uptake 7. Proportion of patients prescribed antibiotic at clinic who reported adherence to prescription on day 7 8. Proportion of patients who were not prescribed antibiotics at clinic who received antibiotics elsewhere between day 0 and day 7 9. Behaviour Change Intervention Recommendations

Trial design: A multi-centre, open label, two arm, randomized-controlled trial

Trial sites: This study will be conducted in outpatient departments and primary care clinics in Burkina Faso, Ghana, India, Nepal and Uganda.

Trial population: The study population will consist of children, adolescents and adults presenting to the health care facility, or provider, with acute fever or history of fever

Sample Size: 19,922

Enrollment

17,294 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 months to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients presenting with fever with no focus/RTI:

    • Children (6 months to <12 years) and adolescents (12 years to less than 18 years old) of both sexes .
    • Presenting with an acute febrile illness defined as temperature of >37.5°C or history of fever within the last 7 days with no focus or suspected RTI.
    • Parent/guardian providing written informed consent for their children if less than 18 years of age.
    • Obtain assent for adolescent between 12 and less than 18 years old
    • Willing to provide blood and other samples and adhere to study procedures explained in the consent forms following the protocol.
    • Available and willing to return for follow-up visit at the health facility on day 7 (+/- 2 days).

Exclusion criteria

  • o Children and adolescents from 6 months to less than 18 years old presenting with chronic febrile illness (fever lasting more than 7 days).

    • Patients with acute febrile illness outside the allowed age range for the site.
    • Severely ill patients requiring hospital admission or referral as assessed by the study clinicians.
    • Anyone refusing consent to the study or not able to attend the health centre for follow-up (adults, the children of parents/guardians, or adolescents who refuse or are missed when asking for consent).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

17,294 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Diagnostic algorithm( paper and electronic) utilizing pathogen specific and non-pathogen specific point of care, rapid diagnostic tests, behavioral change training for healthcare workers
Treatment:
Other: diagnostic algorithm+Point of care rapid diagnostic tests+ Behavior change ( assessed together as a single package of interventions)
control
No Intervention group
Description:
Standard of care practices for acute febrile illness

Trial contacts and locations

8

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Central trial contact

Piero Olliaro, MD; Olawale Salami, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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