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Slow Versus Rapid Rehydration of Severely Malnourished Children

I

International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research (icddr,b)

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 2

Conditions

Diarrhea

Treatments

Other: Rapid dehydration
Other: Slow rehydration

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02216708
PR-11004

Details and patient eligibility

About

The recommendation for correction of dehydration of severely malnourished children with diarrhoea includes oral rehydration and if parenteral rehydration is necessary (for example, in severe dehydration) to infuse intravenous fluids very slowly due to the concern of heart failure. There is not enough evidence to convince some of the physicians dealing with severely malnourished children with dehydrating diarrhoea (for example, cholera) that rapid rehydration per se is associated with increased incidence of over hydration and heart failure. And whether this approach is applicable in the management of severely malnourished children with severe cholera, which usually require rapid correction of water and electrolyte deficits for prevention of deaths due to hypovolaemic shock and other complications, has not been studied carefully. Recently, we have demonstrated that rapid intravenous rehydration (within 4 to 6 hours) of severely malnourished children with dehydrating cholera replacing appropriate amount of fluid was found to be safe. We feel that rapid rehydration would help in improving the renal function, acidosis and thus improve appetite and reduce ORS failure subsequently. Since our study was uncontrolled, so we have planned a randomised controlled study with adequate sample of 250 participants; 125 will be rehydrated slowly (over 10 to 12 hours) following WHO guideline and 125 patients will be rehydrated with intravenous fluid over 6 hours. Children of either gender, age 6 to 60 months, severely malnourished (Wt for length <-3 Z score of WHO growth chart or with nutritional oedema) with a history of watery of <24 hours with signs severe dehydration attending the ICDDRB Dhaka hospital will be asked to participate in this study. After the parents'/Legal guardian's consent, the children will be transferred to the study ward and will be treated according to the protocol. All children will receive similar treatment except the mode of rehydration, different for the two groups. The children will be closely monitored throughout the study period. The primary outcomes incidence of over hydration and ORS failure and secondary outcomes improvement of renal function and improvement of appetite measured by the food intake will be compared between the groups.

Enrollment

208 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 36 months old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. History of acute watery diarrhoea of <24 hours.
  2. Either sex.
  3. Severe dehydration according to WHO guidelines
  4. Wt for length/wt for age < -3 SD of WHO growth standard with or without oedema.(malnutrition)
  5. Consent given by the parents or legal guardian

Exclusion criteria

  1. Bloody diarrhoea.
  2. Severe infection (e.g. severe pneumonia, clinical sepsis, septic shock, meningitis).
  3. Those who received antibiotics/antimicrobial for the current illness

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

208 participants in 2 patient groups

intravenous fluid for rehydration rapidly over 6 hours
Experimental group
Description:
intravenous fluid for rehydration rapidly over 6 hours
Treatment:
Other: Rapid dehydration
receive slow rehydration recommended by WHO (12 hours)
Experimental group
Description:
receive intravenous fluid followed by ORS (slow rehydration recommended by WHO) over 12 hours
Treatment:
Other: Slow rehydration

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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