Abstract:
Introduction The WHO’s Integrated Management of
Childhood Illness (IMCI) in young infants <2 months of age
includes the identification and management of signs of
possible serious bacterial infection (PSBI). However, equal
importance is given to all the PSBI signs, which signal
the need for referral and hospital management, except
for fast breathing in infants aged 7–59 days, for which
outpatient treatment by clinical staff working at a health
facility is recommended. Moreover, studies to validate
the importance of clinical signs of PSBI have mostly used
the need for hospitalisation as the outcome. There is a
need to further examine the association of signs of PSBI
individually and in combination with risk of mortality and to
analyse global data to inform global recommendations.
Methods and analysis We will create a dataset that
integrates data from population- based studies globally
with similar designs that have examined the presence
of signs of PSBI identified by frontline health workers
throughout the young infant period (days 0 to <60) and
that have also recorded infant vital status. We will conduct
pooled, individual- level analyses of the frequency of
identification of signs individually and in combinations and
will conduct three types of analyses of association of signs
of PSBI with mortality: (1) case fatality, which has been
used in a multisite study of mortality risk associated with
signs of PSBI in young infants in Africa; (2) Cox regression,
which will enable time- varying analysis of exposure in
relation to mortality, as has been done in a multisite study
in Asia and (3) machine learning analysis, which has not
previously been applied to any of the available data.
Ethics and dissemination All prior studies incorporated
into our pooled analysis were approved by the independent
local ethics committee/institutional review board (IRB) at
each study site in each country, and all study participants
provided informed consent. This project was approved by
the Stanford University School of Medicine IRB protocol
74456. Study findings will be disseminated through
publications in peer- reviewed journals, WHO documents,
and presentations at maternal and child health meetings. STRENGTHS AND LIMITATIONS OF THIS STUDY
⇒ Pooling of individual subject data available globally.
⇒ Pooling of population- based studies using com
mon designs for subject enrolment, baseline co
variates and assessment of community health
worker (CHW)- identified clinical signs of the WHO’s
Integrated Management of Childhood Illness singly
and in combinations and vital status.
⇒ Use of analytic methods to assess risk for mortality
that complement (case- fatality and regression) and
extend (machine learning) prior approaches.
⇒ There may have been some variations in the assess
ments of clinical signs by the CHWs across study
sites, although efforts were made to standardise
themNeonatal deaths comprise nearly half of
all mortality in children before their fifth
birthday.1 The most common causes of
neonatal mortality, based on modelled esti
mates from global data, are complications
ofpreterm birth (0.88 million, 36.0%);
intrapartum- related events (‘birth asphyxia’)
(0.58 million, 23.8%) and infections
including pneumonia, sepsis and meningitis
(0.4 million, 16.4%).2 Based on data from
11 surveillance sites in Africa and Asia, the
Alliance for Maternal and Newborn Health
Improvement (AMANHI) mortality study
group found that perinatal asphyxia (40% in
South Asia and 35% in sub- Saharan Africa)
and severe infections (35% in South Asia and
37% in sub- Saharan Africa) were the most
common causes of deaths in the neonatal
period, followed by complications of preterm