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RecruitingNCT06599580

Mother Screening for Relapse Using Mid-upper Arm Circumference Among Children Recovered From Severe Acute Malnutrition (Full Scale Trial)

Mother Screening for Relapse Using Mid-upper Arm Circumference Among Children Recovered From Severe Acute Malnutrition (MAMAN)

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
2,400 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of California, San Francisco · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
6 Months – 54 Months
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

A 1:1:1 individually randomized unmasked controlled trial is proposed in which caregivers will be trained to screen their children who have recovered from an episode of SAM (severe acute malnutrition) using MUAC (mid-upper arm circumference) tapes. One arm will include caregiver screening with a mid-upper arm circumference tape and usual monthly follow-up schedule for the first 3 months post enrollment and a final follow-up at 6 months. Another arm will include caregiver screening with a mid-upper arm circumference tape and a reduced follow-up schedule for one visit at 3 months and a final visit at 6 months. The third arm will adhere to the current standard of care, which is no caregiver training to conduct mid-upper arm circumference screenings and monthly clinic-based follow-up appointments for 3 months with a final visit at 6 months post enrollment. Children aged 6-54 months with a documented recovery from uncomplicated severe acute malnutrition that was managed in a participating outpatient nutritional program and their caregivers will be eligible for inclusion in the trial. Caregivers will be trained to screen their children weekly for 6 months following discharge from the nutritional program and will be counseled to bring their child back to the nutritional program should their mid-upper arm circumference value fall in the red zone of the mid-upper arm circumference tape (\< 11.5 cm). All children will be seen at 3 and 6 months for the primary outcome assessment. By conducting this study, our primary goal is to determine if training caregivers to screen their children for relapse to MAM (moderate acute malnutrition) or SAM (severe acute malnutrition) using mid-upper arm circumference tapes following recovery from SAM (severe acute malnutrition) will reduce the risk of relapse. An additional aim is to assess the level of acceptability of caregivers screening children for malnutrition using mid-upper arm circumference tapes from both a clinic and caregiver perspective.

Detailed description

A pilot randomized controlled trial for MAMAN was conducted to find if training caregivers to perform mid-upper arm circumference measurements to screen for malnutrition is feasible. This research will be expanded by assessing caregiver screening for detection of moderate acute malnutrition or severe acute malnutrition relapse with a 1:1:1 randomized controlled trial enrolling caregiver-child dyads of an increased sample size of 1200 dyads, totaling 2400 individuals. This study will address the need for evidence of the effectiveness of caregiver administered mid-upper arm circumference screening in the improvement of outcomes for children who have recovered from severe acute malnutrition. The effectiveness of training caregivers to screen for child malnutrition relapse using mid-upper arm circumference tapes, risk of relapse, speed of relapse detection, and anthropometric outcomes of the children will be analyzed. This will assist in providing evidence to incorporate the routine inclusion of mid-upper arm circumference screening training for all caregivers of children who are being discharged from severe acute malnutrition treatment. SPECIFIC AIM 1: Determine the effectiveness of training caregivers to screen for relapse to moderate acute malnutrition or severe acute malnutrition using mid-upper arm circumference tapes following recovery from severe acute malnutrition for improving anthropometric outcomes and improving time to relapse detection. It is hypothesized that caregiver screening will be effective for reducing time to detection of relapse and that children receiving caregiver screening will have better anthropometric measures at 6 months post recovery and faster time to detection of relapse among those who relapse. * Specific Aim 1A: Determine if detection of relapse in children who have recently recovered from severe acute malnutrition is more expeditious when caregivers are trained to screen for relapse to moderate acute malnutrition or severe acute malnutrition using mid-upper arm circumference tapes compared to current standard of care. It is hypothesized that a reduction in time to relapse detection will occur when caregivers are trained to screen for relapse to moderate acute malnutrition or severe acute malnutrition using mid-upper arm circumference tapes. * Specific Aim 1B: Determine the effectiveness of caregivers screening mid-upper arm circumference measurements on improving anthropometric outcomes for children. It is hypothesized that training for caregiver screening of mid-upper arm circumference will lead to earlier intervention and improved anthropometric outcomes for children at 12 months post-admission. SPECIFIC AIM 2: Determine the acceptability caregiver mid-upper arm circumference training. It is hypothesized that most survey responses at the 3 and 6-month visits will show high levels of acceptance towards caregiver screening of children using mid-upper arm circumference tapes.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALTraining caregivers to screen children for malnutrition relapseCaregivers enrolled in the trial who are assigned to the two experimental arms, will be provided mid-upper arm circumference tapes and trained on how to screen their child for malnutrition relapse and asked to bring their child back to the clinic if relapse is detected.
OTHERReduced follow-up scheduleCaregivers in one of the caregiver mid-upper arm circumference screening arms, will be asked to adhere to a reduced follow-up clinic visit schedule for when they bring their child to the clinic for planned visits. The standard of care includes monthly visits for the first 3 months post recovery, but those randomized to the reduced follow-up schedule arm, will not bring their child to the clinic for planned visits 1 month and 2 months after baseline.

Timeline

Start date
2025-03-20
Primary completion
2027-11-01
Completion
2027-11-01
First posted
2024-09-19
Last updated
2025-11-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Burkina Faso

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06599580. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.