行为干预临床试验设计中的问题——赞比亚纯母乳喂养研究

Donald M Thea , Cheswa Vwalika , Prisca Kasonde , Chipepo Kankasa , Moses Sinkala , Katherine Semrau , Erin Shutes , Christine Ayash , Wei-Yann Tsai , Grace Aldrovandi , Louise Kuhn
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引用次数: 42

摘要

目的:我们介绍了赞比亚纯母乳喂养研究(ZEBS)的基本原理和设计,这是一项随机试验,旨在评估短时间纯母乳喂养(EBF)作为一种减少产后人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)传播的策略,同时保留这种重要的婴儿喂养模式的其他健康益处。方法:在赞比亚卢萨卡招募了1200名hiv阳性孕妇,并对她们的婴儿进行了24个月的随访。除了奈韦拉平(NVP)外,所有妇女还接受密集和频繁的诊所和家庭咨询,以支持纯母乳喂养。当婴儿1周大时,一半的妇女被随机分配到一组,鼓励她们在4个月时突然(24小时)停止所有母乳喂养。实验(随机)比较的主要结果是24个月无hiv生存。该设计也是观察性的,并将比较那些坚持和不坚持促进纯母乳喂养的咨询干预的人之间的艾滋病毒传播率。结论:本研究旨在量化早期停止纯母乳喂养以强化行为干预阻断HIV母婴传播的获益-风险比,并采用观察和实验分析相结合的方法。我们的研究设计评估了有效性,也有一个突出的应用组件,如果干预是有效的,它将允许在低资源社区快速和可持续地采用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Issues in the design of a clinical trial with a behavioral intervention—the Zambia exclusive breast-feeding study

Purpose: We present the rationale and design of the Zambian Exclusive Breast-feeding Study (ZEBS), a randomized trial evaluating the efficacy of short-duration exclusive breast-feeding (EBF) as a strategy to reduce postnatal human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission while preserving the other health benefits of this important mode of infant feeding. Methods: One thousand two hundred HIV-positive pregnant women were recruited in Lusaka, Zambia, and followed with their infants for 24 months. In addition to Nevirapine (NVP), all women received intensive and frequent clinic- and home-based counseling to support exclusive breast-feeding. When the infant was 1 week of age, half of the women were randomly assigned to a group encouraged to abruptly (<24 h) cease all breast-feeding at 4 months. The primary outcome of the experimental (randomized) comparison is HIV-free survival at 24 months. The design is also observational and will compare HIV transmission rates between those who do and do not adhere to the counseling intervention promoting exclusive breast-feeding. Conclusion: Our study aims to quantify the benefit–risk ratio of early cessation of exclusive breast-feeding to interrupt mother-to-child transmission of HIV with an intensive behavioral intervention and has both observational and experimental analytic approaches. Our study design assesses efficacy and also has a prominent applied component that if the intervention is effective, it will permit rapid and sustainable adoption within low-resource communities.

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