Background.Interventions to reduce under-5 mortality can either target the vulnerable or
include all children regardless of state of health. Here, we assess whether
mass distribution of a broad-spectrum antibiotic to pre-school children
reduces mortality in sub-Saharan Africa.Methods.MORDOR was a large simple trial that randomized communities in Malawi, Niger,
and Tanzania to 4 biannual mass distributions of either oral azithromycin or
placebo. Children aged 1-59 months were enumerated and offered treatment.
Vital status was assessed at the subsequent biannual census. The primary
outcome was aggregate all-cause mortality, with country-specific rates as
pre-specified subgroup analyses.Results.In total, 1533 communities were randomized, 190,238 children censused at
baseline, and 323,302 person-years monitored. Mean antibiotic coverage over
the 4 biannual distributions was 90.4% (SD 10.4%) of the censused
population. The overall annual mortality rate in placebo- treated
communities was 16.5 per 1000 person-years (9.6 per 1000 person-years in
Malawi, 27.5 in Niger, and 5.5 in Tanzania). Antibiotic-treated communities
had an estimated 13.5% lower mortality overall (95% CI 6.7%—19.8%,
P<0.001). Mortality was 5.7% lower in Malawi (CI -
9.7%—18.9%, P=0.45), 18.1% lower in Niger (CI 10.0%—25.5%,
P<0.001), and 3.4% lower in Tanzania (CI
-21.2%—23.0%, P=0.77). The greatest reduction was observed
in 1-5 month-old children (24.9% lower, CI 10.6%—37.0%,
P=0.001).Conclusions.Mass azithromycin distribution to post-neonatal, pre-school children may
reduce childhood mortality in sub-Saharan Africa, particularly in high
mortality areas such as Niger. Any implementation would need to consider
selection for antibiotic resistance.
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