The APPLe study: a randomized, community-based, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin for the prevention of preterm birth, with meta-analysis.

Premature birth is the major cause of perinatal mortality and morbidity in both high- and low-income countries. The causes of preterm labour are multiple but infection is important. We have previously described an unusually high incidence of preterm birth (20%) in an ultrasound-dated, rural, pregnan...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nynke R van den Broek, Sarah A White, Mark Goodall, Chikondi Ntonya, Edith Kayira, George Kafulafula, James P Neilson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-12-01
Series:PLoS Medicine
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2776277?pdf=render
id doaj-efd3d1238bf1455da0ca5c7a8462ead4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-efd3d1238bf1455da0ca5c7a8462ead42020-11-25T01:30:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Medicine1549-12771549-16762009-12-01612e100019110.1371/journal.pmed.1000191The APPLe study: a randomized, community-based, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin for the prevention of preterm birth, with meta-analysis.Nynke R van den BroekSarah A WhiteMark GoodallChikondi NtonyaEdith KayiraGeorge KafulafulaJames P NeilsonPremature birth is the major cause of perinatal mortality and morbidity in both high- and low-income countries. The causes of preterm labour are multiple but infection is important. We have previously described an unusually high incidence of preterm birth (20%) in an ultrasound-dated, rural, pregnant population in Southern Malawi with high burdens of infective morbidity. We have now studied the impact of routine prophylaxis with azithromycin as directly observed, single-dose therapy at two gestational windows to try to decrease the incidence of preterm birth.We randomized 2,297 pregnant women attending three rural and one peri-urban health centres in Southern Malawi to a placebo-controlled trial of oral azithromycin (1 g) given at 16-24 and 28-32 wk gestation. Gestational age was determined by ultrasound before 24 wk. Women and their infants were followed up until 6 wk post delivery. The primary outcome was incidence of preterm delivery, defined as <37 wk. Secondary outcomes were mean gestational age at delivery, perinatal mortality, birthweight, maternal malaria, and anaemia. Analysis was by intention to treat. There were no significant differences in outcome between the azithromycin group (n = 1,096) and the placebo group (n = 1,087) in respect of preterm birth (16.8% versus 17.4%), odds ratio (OR) 0.96, 95% confidence interval (0.76-1.21); mean gestational age at delivery (38.5 versus 38.4 weeks), mean difference 0.16 (-0.08 to 0.40); mean birthweight (3.03 versus 2.99 kg), mean difference 0.04 (-0.005 to 0.08); perinatal deaths (4.3% versus 5.0%), OR 0.85 (0.53-1.38); or maternal malarial parasitaemia (11.5% versus 10.1%), OR 1.11 (0.84-1.49) and anaemia (44.1% versus 41.3%) at 28-32 weeks, OR 1.07 (0.88-1.30). Meta-analysis of the primary outcome results with seven other studies of routine antibiotic prophylaxis in pregnancy (>6,200 pregnancies) shows no effect on preterm birth (relative risk 1.02, 95% confidence interval 0.86-1.22).This study provides no support for the use of antibiotics as routine prophylaxis to prevent preterm birth in high risk populations; prevention of preterm birth requires alternative strategies.Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN84023116http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2776277?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nynke R van den Broek
Sarah A White
Mark Goodall
Chikondi Ntonya
Edith Kayira
George Kafulafula
James P Neilson
spellingShingle Nynke R van den Broek
Sarah A White
Mark Goodall
Chikondi Ntonya
Edith Kayira
George Kafulafula
James P Neilson
The APPLe study: a randomized, community-based, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin for the prevention of preterm birth, with meta-analysis.
PLoS Medicine
author_facet Nynke R van den Broek
Sarah A White
Mark Goodall
Chikondi Ntonya
Edith Kayira
George Kafulafula
James P Neilson
author_sort Nynke R van den Broek
title The APPLe study: a randomized, community-based, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin for the prevention of preterm birth, with meta-analysis.
title_short The APPLe study: a randomized, community-based, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin for the prevention of preterm birth, with meta-analysis.
title_full The APPLe study: a randomized, community-based, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin for the prevention of preterm birth, with meta-analysis.
title_fullStr The APPLe study: a randomized, community-based, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin for the prevention of preterm birth, with meta-analysis.
title_full_unstemmed The APPLe study: a randomized, community-based, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin for the prevention of preterm birth, with meta-analysis.
title_sort apple study: a randomized, community-based, placebo-controlled trial of azithromycin for the prevention of preterm birth, with meta-analysis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Medicine
issn 1549-1277
1549-1676
publishDate 2009-12-01
description Premature birth is the major cause of perinatal mortality and morbidity in both high- and low-income countries. The causes of preterm labour are multiple but infection is important. We have previously described an unusually high incidence of preterm birth (20%) in an ultrasound-dated, rural, pregnant population in Southern Malawi with high burdens of infective morbidity. We have now studied the impact of routine prophylaxis with azithromycin as directly observed, single-dose therapy at two gestational windows to try to decrease the incidence of preterm birth.We randomized 2,297 pregnant women attending three rural and one peri-urban health centres in Southern Malawi to a placebo-controlled trial of oral azithromycin (1 g) given at 16-24 and 28-32 wk gestation. Gestational age was determined by ultrasound before 24 wk. Women and their infants were followed up until 6 wk post delivery. The primary outcome was incidence of preterm delivery, defined as <37 wk. Secondary outcomes were mean gestational age at delivery, perinatal mortality, birthweight, maternal malaria, and anaemia. Analysis was by intention to treat. There were no significant differences in outcome between the azithromycin group (n = 1,096) and the placebo group (n = 1,087) in respect of preterm birth (16.8% versus 17.4%), odds ratio (OR) 0.96, 95% confidence interval (0.76-1.21); mean gestational age at delivery (38.5 versus 38.4 weeks), mean difference 0.16 (-0.08 to 0.40); mean birthweight (3.03 versus 2.99 kg), mean difference 0.04 (-0.005 to 0.08); perinatal deaths (4.3% versus 5.0%), OR 0.85 (0.53-1.38); or maternal malarial parasitaemia (11.5% versus 10.1%), OR 1.11 (0.84-1.49) and anaemia (44.1% versus 41.3%) at 28-32 weeks, OR 1.07 (0.88-1.30). Meta-analysis of the primary outcome results with seven other studies of routine antibiotic prophylaxis in pregnancy (>6,200 pregnancies) shows no effect on preterm birth (relative risk 1.02, 95% confidence interval 0.86-1.22).This study provides no support for the use of antibiotics as routine prophylaxis to prevent preterm birth in high risk populations; prevention of preterm birth requires alternative strategies.Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN84023116
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2776277?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT nynkervandenbroek theapplestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT sarahawhite theapplestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT markgoodall theapplestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT chikondintonya theapplestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT edithkayira theapplestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT georgekafulafula theapplestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT jamespneilson theapplestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT nynkervandenbroek applestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT sarahawhite applestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT markgoodall applestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT chikondintonya applestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT edithkayira applestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT georgekafulafula applestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
AT jamespneilson applestudyarandomizedcommunitybasedplacebocontrolledtrialofazithromycinforthepreventionofpretermbirthwithmetaanalysis
_version_ 1725088788383793152