The study population consists of all households residing in eligible kebeles (sub-districts) within districts in Amhara National Regional State which are identified as having a high prevalence of trachoma and infection measured from recent trachoma impact assessments. Within each study kebele, one village will be randomly selected to serve as the sentinel study site for that kebele. Once these villages are chosen, the study team will use government-provided census records, or perform a census in each village, and will randomly choose 50 children to serve as the sentinel children for the study. After the baseline visit, all kebeles will be randomized into one of the two treatment arms to either receive standard-or-care treatment, which is an annual community-wide mass drug administration (MDA), or the enhanced antibiotic treatment. Recruitment will take place at the selected children's household. Oral informed consent will be sought from village leader/chairmen before surveys are conducted in a village. Oral informed consent will then be obtained from household heads of those houses included in the study; and then from each participating individual. Oral consents will be obtained given the low literacy rates in rural Amhara. Data collection will occur at baseline, week 4, month 12, and month 24 in both arms of the study. A head of household will be asked a series of household level questions, which will be followed by a household-level census, where all consenting participants residing in the selected households will have their eyes examined for trachoma signs. This is a non-invasive procedure whereby a trained trachoma grader flips each eyelid and examines for trachoma signs. Lastly, the selected child and one randomly selected adult will have their right eye lid swabbed for evidence of trachoma infection. The total estimated respondent burden is 30 to 45 minutes.
Trachoma, caused by ocular infection with Chlamydia trachomatis, is one of the leading causes of preventable blindness worldwide with 51 countries known or suspected to be endemic for blinding trachoma. The World Health Organization (WHO) has recommended the Surgery, Antibiotic treatment, promotion of Facial cleanliness and hygiene, and Environmental improvement (SAFE) strategy for trachoma control. Annual mass drug administration (MDA) with the antibiotic azithromycin to treat trachoma is effective, at least in areas with moderate to low levels or trachoma. This has not been the experience in regions with high levels of trachoma including Amhara, Ethiopia. After 8 rounds of annual MDA, trachoma remains stubbornly high throughout the region. Given this experience from the Amhara region of Ethiopia, The Carter Center will work with local government partners at the regional, zonal, district, and sub-district levels to assess the effectiveness of a targeted antibiotic treatment regimen on trachoma prevalence by using a cluster randomized, controlled trial design with the understanding that increasing the need for drug in the short-term to intensify impact, may result in reduced need for drug in the long-term. The effectiveness of this alternative treatment regimen will be assessed over a period of 2 years by periodically evaluating trachoma outcomes throughout study communities. The key objectives of this study are to: 1. To determine the effectiveness of an enhanced antibiotic treatment regimen characterized by a community-wide MDA followed by two rounds of targeted (to children age 2 to 9 years) treatment in quick succession (1-2 weeks apart) compared to annual standard-of-care MDA. 2. To determine the added cost and cost-effectiveness of an enhanced antibiotic treatment regimen compared to annual standard-of-care MDA.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Standard of care annual community-wide mass drug administration (MDA) will be provided at the normally scheduled time.
Two rounds of treatment targeted to all children aged 2 to 9 years old. The first targeted round will be 1-2 weeks after the community-wide MDA and the second round will occur another 1-2 weeks later.
Prevalence of Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) infection
The community-level prevalence of CT infection in children aged 6 months to 9 years will be compared between study arms.
Time frame: Month 12
Change in prevalence of trachomatous inflammation-follicular (TF)
The prevalence of trachomatous inflammation-follicular (TF) among all household members will be noted at each visit and compared between study arms.
Time frame: Baseline, Week 4, Month 12, Month 24
Change in prevalence of trachomatous inflammation-intense (TI)
The prevalence of trachomatous inflammation-intense (TI) among all household members will be noted at each visit and compared between study arms.
Time frame: Baseline, Week 4, Month 12, Month 24
Change in Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) infection in children
The change in prevalence of Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) infections in children ages 6 months to 9 years will be compared between study arms. Analysis will be conducted which will include all three of these time-points to compare infection prevalence between the comparison arms
Time frame: Baseline, Month 12, Month 24
Prevalence of Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) infection among adults
The prevalence of Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) infection among adults will be compared between study arms.
Time frame: Month 12
Cost
The cost of the enhanced intervention will be compared to the cost of the standard-of-care intervention.
Time frame: Month 24
Cost-effectiveness
The cost-effectiveness of the enhanced intervention will be compared to the cost of the standard-of-care intervention. The incremental cost effectiveness analysis ratio approach will be used. Effectiveness is defined as the percent CT reduction from baseline to 24 months and the outcome of this analysis will be the cost per percent of CT infection reduction.
Time frame: Month 24
Correlation between Chlamydial Infection and trachomatous inflammation-follicular (TF) and trachomatous inflammation-intense (TI)
We will conduct cluster level analysis using cluster level Ct and clinical data including TF and TI.
Time frame: Baseline, Week 4, Month 12, Month 24
Cluster-level Chlamydial load
Infectious load for all individual specimens from children aged 6 months to 9 years who test positive for CT will be measured for chlamydia load. Chlamydial load will be noted at each visit and compared between study arms.
Time frame: Baseline, Week 4, Month 12, Month 24
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