A cluster-randomized, placebo-controlled, maternal vitamin A or beta-carotene supplementation trial in Bangladesh: design and methods

Alain B Labrique, Parul Christian, Rolf D W Klemm, Mahbubur Rashid, Abu Ahmed Shamim, Allan Massie, Kerry Schulze, Andre Hackman, Keith P West Jr, Alain B Labrique, Parul Christian, Rolf D W Klemm, Mahbubur Rashid, Abu Ahmed Shamim, Allan Massie, Kerry Schulze, Andre Hackman, Keith P West Jr

Abstract

Background: We present the design, methods and population characteristics of a large community trial that assessed the efficacy of a weekly supplement containing vitamin A or beta-carotene, at recommended dietary levels, in reducing maternal mortality from early gestation through 12 weeks postpartum. We identify challenges faced and report solutions in implementing an intervention trial under low-resource, rural conditions, including the importance of population choice in promoting generalizability, maintaining rigorous data quality control to reduce inter- and intra- worker variation, and optimizing efficiencies in information and resources flow from and to the field.

Methods: This trial was a double-masked, cluster-randomized, dual intervention, placebo-controlled trial in a contiguous rural area of ~435 sq km with a population of ~650,000 in Gaibandha and Rangpur Districts of Northwestern Bangladesh. Approximately 120,000 married women of reproductive age underwent 5-weekly home surveillance, of whom ~60,000 were detected as pregnant, enrolled into the trial and gave birth to ~44,000 live-born infants. Upon enrollment, at ~ 9 weeks' gestation, pregnant women received a weekly oral supplement containing vitamin A (7000 ug retinol equivalents (RE)), beta-carotene (42 mg, or ~7000 ug RE) or a placebo through 12 weeks postpartum, according to prior randomized allocation of their cluster of residence. Systems described include enlistment and 5-weekly home surveillance for pregnancy based on menstrual history and urine testing, weekly supervised supplementation, periodic risk factor interviews, maternal and infant vital outcome monitoring, birth defect surveillance and clinical/biochemical substudies.

Results: The primary outcome was pregnancy-related mortality assessed for 3 months following parturition. Secondary outcomes included fetal loss due to miscarriage or stillbirth, infant mortality under three months of age, maternal obstetric and infectious morbidity, infant infectious morbidity, maternal and infant micronutrient status, fetal and infant growth and prematurity, external birth defects and postnatal infant growth to 3 months of age.

Conclusion: Aspects of study site selection and its "resonance" with national and rural qualities of Bangladesh, the trial's design, methods and allocation group comparability achieved by randomization, field procedures and innovative approaches to solving challenges in trial conduct are described and discussed. This trial is registered with http://Clinicaltrials.gov as protocol NCT00198822.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
The JiVitA Research Project setting, a population dense (~1000 persons per sq km), contiguous rural area of ~ 450 sq km at 30 m above mean sea level, west of the confluence of the Teesta and Jamuna rivers of Northwest Bangladesh.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Basic trial design of JiVitA-1 and pregnancy identification.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Study area map illustrating the randomized distribution of treatment allocation to study sectors.
Figure 4
Figure 4
GIS maps of the JiVitA-1 study area, illustrating successful sector-level randomization by displaying sector means of four select characteristics of enrolled women in those sectors (early pregnancy arm circumference, living standards index [14], gestational age at first dose, and dosing compliance throughout the duration of the study).
Figure 5
Figure 5
Flow diagram of main JiVitA-1 trial procedures.

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Source: PubMed

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