This clinical trial was conducted in a population where tympanic membrane perforation occurs in 60% infants in the first year of life. Nasopharyngeal colonisation (nasal contamination) with pathogenic bacteria occurs within weeks of life and predicts persistent middle ear infection throughout childhood. The trial aimed to assess whether twice daily antibiotics commencing at first detection of middle ear effusion would cure the infection and/or prevent disease progression, compared to placebo. The study was conducted in three remote Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory of Australia. The annual birth cohort was 45. Aboriginal infants were seen as soon as possible after birth, and at 2 weekly intervals until middle ear effusion was detected by pneumatic otoscopy and tympanometry. Following consent, infants were randomised to either amoxycillin(50 mg/kg/d BD) or placebo equivalent for up to 24 weeks, or until normal middle ear status was detected at 2 consecutive monthly scheduled examinations. At monthly examinations the infant also had a general health check, parents were interviewed, child's medical record was reviewed, and nasopharyngeal swabs were collected.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
126
50 mg/kg/day twice daily
50 mg/kg/d twice daily
Menzies School of Health Research
Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Proportion of children with middle ear effusion
Time frame: end of intervention
Proportion of study visits at which middle ear effusion detected
Time frame: during intervention
Proportion of infants with tympanic membrane perforation
Time frame: end of intervention
Proportion of study visits with tympanic membrane perforation
Time frame: during intervention
Proportion of infants with nasopharyngeal colonisation with resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae
Time frame: end of intervention
proportion of infants withdrawn from study due to intervention adverse events
Time frame: end of intervention
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