Abstract:
Background: In sub-Saharan Africa, where infectious diseases and nutritional deficiencies are common, severe
anaemia is a common cause of paediatric hospital admission, yet the evidence to support current treatment
recommendations is limited. To avert overuse of blood products, the World Health Organisation advocates a
conservative transfusion policy and recommends iron, folate and anti-helminthics at discharge. Outcomes are
unsatisfactory with high rates of in-hospital mortality (9–10 %), 6-month mortality and relapse (6 %). A definitive trial to
establish best transfusion and treatment strategies to prevent both early and delayed mortality and relapse is warranted.
Methods/Design: TRACT is a multicentre randomised controlled trial of 3954 children aged 2 months to 12
years admitted to hospital with severe anaemia (haemoglobin < 6 g/dl). Children will be enrolled over 2 years
in 4 centres in Uganda and Malawi and followed for 6 months. The trial will simultaneously evaluate (in a factorial trial
with a 3 x 2 x 2 design) 3 ways to reduce short-term and longer-term mortality and morbidity following admission to
hospital with severe anaemia in African children.
The trial will compare: (i) R1: liberal transfusion (30 ml/kg whole blood) versus conservative transfusion (20 ml/kg)
versus no transfusion (control). The control is only for children with uncomplicated severe anaemia (haemoglobin
4–6 g/dl); (ii) R2: post-discharge multi-vitamin multi-mineral supplementation (including folate and iron) versus
routine care (folate and iron) for 3 months; (iii) R3: post-discharge cotrimoxazole prophylaxis for 3 months versus
no prophylaxis. All randomisations are open. Enrolment to the trial started September 2014 and is currently ongoing.
Primary outcome is cumulative mortality to 4 weeks for the transfusion strategy comparisons, and to 6 months for the
nutritional support/antibiotic prophylaxis comparisons. Secondary outcomes include mortality, morbidity
(haematological correction, nutritional and infectious), safety and cost-effectiveness.
Discussion: If confirmed by the trial, a cheap and widely available ‘bundle’ of effective interventions, directed
at immediate and downstream consequences of severe anaemia, could lead to substantial reductions in mortality in a
substantial number of African children hospitalised with severe anaemia every year, if widely implemented