Introduction The WHO Nutrition Target aims to reduce the global prevalence of low birth weight by 30% by the year 2025. The Enhancing Nutrition and Antenatal Infection Treatment (ENAT) study will test the impact of packages of pregnancy interventions to enhance maternal nutrition and infection management on birth outcomes in rural Ethiopia. Methods and analysis ENAT is a pragmatic, open-label, 2×2 factorial, randomised clinical effectiveness study implemented in 12 rural health centres in Amhara, Ethiopia. Eligible pregnant women presenting at antenatal care (ANC) visits at <24 weeks gestation are enrolled (n=2400). ANC quality is strengthened across all centres. Health centres are randomised to receive an enhanced nutrition package (ENP) or standard nutrition care, and within each health centre, individual women are randomised to receive an enhanced infection management package (EIMP) or standard infection care. At ENP centres, women receive a regular supply of adequately iodised salt and iron-folate (IFA), enhanced nutrition counselling and those with mid-upper arm circumference of <23 cm receive a micronutrient fortified balanced energy protein supplement (corn soya blend) until delivery. In standard nutrition centres, women receive routine counselling and IFA. EIMP women have additional screening/treatment for urinary and sexual/reproductive tract infections and intensive deworming. Non-EIMP women are managed syndromically per Ministry of Health Guidelines. Participants are followed until 1-month post partum, and a subset until 6 months. The primary study outcomes are newborn weight and length measured at <72 hours of age. Secondary outcomes include preterm birth, low birth weight and stillbirth rates; newborn head circumference; infant weight and length for age z-scores at birth; maternal anaemia; and weight gain during pregnancy. Ethics and dissemination ENAT is approved by the Institutional Review Boards of Addis Continental Institute of Public Health (001-A1-2019) and Mass General Brigham (2018P002479). Results will be disseminated to local and international stakeholders. Registration number ISRCTN15116516.
The ENAT study is a 2×2 factorial pragmatic, open label, randomised clinical effectiveness study with cluster randomisation of the enhanced nutrition package (ENP) versus standard care (non-ENP) and individual level randomisation of an enhanced infection management package (EIMP) versus standard care (non-EIMP) (figure 2). Enhancing Nutrition and Antenatal Infection Treatment study consort diagram. BEP, balanced protein-energy; EIMP, enhanced infection management package; ENP, enhanced nutrition package; GA, gestational age; IFA, iron–folate; MUAC, mid-upper arm circumferences; RTI, reproductive tract infection; STI, sexually transmitted infection; UTI, urinary tract infection. The ENAT study site was established in 2018 as a partnership with the Addis Continental Institute of Public Health (ACIPH), Amhara Regional Health Bureau (ARHB), Amhara Public Health Institute (APHI) and Brigham and Women’s Hospital. The Amhara region has low-resourced health systems and poor health indicators. As per the 2016 Ethiopian Demographic Health Services data, Amhara had the country’s highest rates of neonatal mortality (47 per 1000 live births) and LBW (22.2%), and high maternal mortality rate (412 per 100 000 live births).28 Rates of any prenatal care and institutional delivery were 82.6% and 54.2%, respectively.29 One in four women of reproductive age are underweight (body mass index (BMI) <18.5 kg/m2)28 and geohelminth infections are prevalent, ranging from 21.1% to 43.5%.30 31 The ENAT study is conducted in 12 rural health centres (each serving~25 000 population) in West Gojjam (South and North Achefer districts (woredas)) and South Gondar (Dera and Libokemem districts) zones, Amhara (figure 3, Site Map). The districts were chosen in collaboration with the ARHB based on the high rates of undernutrition, risk of LBW, need for nutritional programmes and proximity to the regional laboratory. The study health centres were chosen based on accessibility, total ANC volume (minimum 250 women presenting to ANC/year) and infrastructure (functional laboratory). Enhancing Nutrition and Antenatal Infection Treatment study site map, Amhara region, Ethiopia. ENP, enhanced nutrition package. Prior to the study, formative work was conducted with a range of community members (mothers, families, community and religious leaders, health providers).32 This feedback directly informed the design of the study interventions, packages and their implementation. Community sensitisation was performed prior to initiating the study. Pregnant women are recruited from ANC visits in designated ENAT study health centres. A study nurse explains study procedures and obtains written informed consent. For illiterate women, an impartial witness attests to consent and the woman provides a thumbprint. To encourage early presentation at ANC clinics, community sensitisation was conducted prior to study initiation. Study field data collectors and community cadres disseminated information about the ENAT study at monthly community-based pregnant women’s conferences, and community and religious gatherings and encouraged presentation to the health centres if/as soon as pregnancy was suspected. Study enrolment began in August 2020 and will continue until the sample size has been met. As of 1 September 2021 ENAT has enrolled 2148 women. Health systems strengthening of ANC services was performed in ENAT health centres prior to the study to benefit all women receiving care in these facilities. Health systems strengthening was conducted in partnership with ARHB and Jhpiego. Health center staff were trained in ANC standards, guidelines and measurements (blood pressure, gestational age, birth weight33). Facilities were stocked with basic equipment, medications and diagnostic testing. Laboratory capacity was augmented, and all health centres were equipped with ultrasound machines (GE Vscan Access, General Electric, Boston, MA). ENAT study interventions are delivered within the health system at routine ANC visits by health center staff, with supervision provided by research staff. Routine ANC nutrition counselling includes increasing intake and dietary diversity, however, can vary depending on patient load. For ENP centres, supplementary, locally contextualised, counselling material was developed based on our formative work,32 and is delivered by midwives. Content includes BMI-based recommended weight gain, dietary diversity and educational messages developed to address local cultural beliefs related to dietary intake during pregnancy as well as side effects of IFA. Nutrition education materials, including posters and videos, are shown in ENP health centres to promote women’s behaviour change and maximise their exposure to various but consistent nutrition messages (table 1). Enhanced nutrition package (ENP) components ANC, antenatal care; ENP, enhanced nutrition package; IFA, iron–folate; MUAC, mid-upper arm circumferences. The Ethiopian Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) recommends 60 mg iron plus 400 µg folic acid supplements, orally once daily in pregnancy. In August–September 2019, coverage of IFA was 46.3% in the ENAT health centres, and our formative work indicated that barriers included local beliefs about delivering ‘big babies’ and side effects such as constipation. In the ENP health centres, additional counselling is conducted, using video/media to address common cultural beliefs and side effects. Women are reminded at each ANC visit about IFA consumption, management of side effects and provided refills when their home IFA supply is low. In ENP centres, we provide a monthly household supply of high-quality adequately iodised salt at every ANC visit. The iodised salt (Waff Manufacturing, 30–40 ppm potassium iodate, 600 g bottle) is packaged in airtight, resealable, polyethylene containers, to allow resealing after use and to reduce risk of evaporative losses at the household level. Quality control procedures are in place to ensure that iodisation is in the proper range at production and maintained at distribution sites. Women are counselled that salt should be used to replace their household salt, on the approximate daily use (~10 g (three pinches)/day), the proper storage of salt (away from light, heat, humidity, recapping container after use) and use of salt only after cooking/heating of food. In the ENP health centres, women who have mid-upper arm circumferences (MUAC) 12 weeks (table 2). ENAT Enhanced infection management package (EIMP) components ENAT, Enhancing Nutrition and Antenatal Infection Treatment; FMOH, Ethiopian Federal Ministry of Health. A clean catch midstream urine specimen is collected using a vacutainer with boric acid preservative (Beckton Dickinson). Urine culture and antibiotic susceptibility testing are performed at APHI, the regional laboratory certified by the ENAO (Ethiopian National Accreditation Office)—ISO (International Organization for Standardization) 15189. Antibiotic susceptibility is determined including the Vitek method (bioMerieux, Marcy l’Etoile, France), or Kirby Bauer Disk Diffusion. Urinary tract infections are classified in online supplemental web table 3 and treated with an oral antibiotic-based on antibiotic sensitivity patterns (online supplemental web table 4). Antibiotics are provided to pregnant women at no cost and the first dose is directly observed. Women with severe illness or difficult to treat infections are referred to the Obstetrics Department at Felege Hiwot Hospital. Women provide a test of cure specimens at the following ANC visit. Women self-collect vaginal specimens (mid-vaginal swab) that are tested for gonorrhoea and chlamydia with the Xpert CT/NG assay (Cepheid, Sunnyvale, California)using the GeneXpert nucleic acid amplification testing platform at APHI. Chlamydia is treated with azithromycin 1 g orally once and gonorrhoea is treated with ceftriaxone 250 mg intramuscular +azithromycin 1 g orally once. Partner treatment is on a voluntary basis with a regimen as recommended by the Ethiopian sexually transmitted infections management guidelines.36 A test of cure is obtained at the next ANC visit. For women who report symptoms of abnormal vaginal discharge, vulvar symptoms or lower abdominal tenderness, additional vaginal swabs are collected for trichomonas and bacterial vaginosis by point of care diagnostics. Trichomonas is tested using the OSOM trichomonas rapid test (Sekisui Diagnostics, Massachusetts). Bacterial vaginosis is tested using Diagnosit BVBLUE test (Gryphus Diagnostics, Knoxville, Tennessee). Trichomonas is treated with metronidazole 2 g orally once, and partners are treated. Bacterial vaginosis is treated with metronidazole 500 mg two times per day for 7 days. In settings of high geohelminth burden, WHO recommends prophylactic deworming in second and third trimester of pregnancy.37 At study initiation, mebendazole (500 mg) was provided two times in pregnancy consistent with WHO guidelines. Due to health provider concerns regarding medication package insert information contraindicating use in early pregnancy, in September 2020, the protocol was modified to a single presumptive deworming in the third trimester. In May 2021, with the adoption of new Ethiopian FMOH ANC guidelines allowing earlier provision of antihelminthics in pregnancy, the ENAT protocol was modified to provide presumptive deworming in the second trimester followed by a stool screening and treatment at least 4 weeks later. In the first post-deworming visit, stool is screened for intestinal parasites in the health centre laboratory using wet mount microscopy available at the health centre. Women identified with parasitic infections are treated as per FMOH recommendations (online supplemental web table 4). At the first level of randomisation, clusters (ie, health centres) are randomised into one of two nutrition interventions: (a) ENP or (b) standard nutrition care. We performed a constrained randomisation to ensure balance across the two arms of the study for key indicators including: population size, pre-study ANC coverage rates, number of births and travel time to the regional centre of Bahir Dar. We: (1) set reasonable tolerance levels for the restriction variables, (2) created all possible random sequences, where each sequence allocated six health centres to the ENAT Nutrition Package and six health centres to routine care, (3) assessed each sequence as to whether or not it met these restriction criteria and (4) chose randomly from the subset of all such allocation sequences that met the criteria. At the second level of randomisation, we randomised individual pregnant women presenting for ANC at each health centre to receive (a) ENAT EIMP, or (b) standard infection care (figure 2). Each health centre received a pre-generated randomisation list of sequential individual assignments to EIMP or standard care, where assignments were equally allocated to each arm within randomly permuted blocks of size 4, 8 or 12. The randomisation lists were generated separately, by health centre, using a script written by one of the authors (LCM) in R.38 The primary outcomes are P1. Newborn weight measured within 72 hours of birth. P2. Newborn length measured within 72 hours of birth. The secondary outcomes include: S1. Length of gestation, with gestational age determined by <=24-week pregnancy ultrasonography. S2a. Proportion of pregnancies resulting in spontaneous delivery at <37 weeks gestation. S2b. Proportion of livebirths born <37 weeks gestation S3. Proportion of newborns born small-for-gestational age, as defined by the INTERGROWTH 21st neonatal birth weight standard. S4. Proportion of newborns born of LBW (<2500 g), as measured within 72 hours of life. S5. Stillbirth rate. S6. Newborn head circumference within 72 hours of birth. S7. Infant Z-scores for weight-for-age, length-for-age, head circumference-for-age within 72 hours of birth. S8. Maternal gestational weight gain. S9. Maternal anaemia (third trimester). The definitions used for each outcome measure is shown in table 3. Enhancing Nutrition and Antenatal Infection Treatment study outcomes BPD, biparietal diameter; CRL, crown rump length; FL, femur length; GA, gestational age. The timeline of individual participant study visits, measurements and data collection are shown in table 4. All data collection and study measurements are performed by research staff (study nurses or data collectors) after routine ANC visits. Study visits are conducted at the health centre, with the exception of the birth visit that may be conducted at home within 72 hours of delivery, for births occurring at home or outside of the study area. Adherence monitoring visits also occur at the home for those participants who do not return to the health centre for follow-up. Participant timeline schedule of enrolment, interventions, assessment and visits ANC, antenatal care; EIMP, enhanced infection management package; ENP, enhanced nutrition package; GA, gestational age. The core of the data collection system is the Survey Solutions platform (World Bank, V.20.08, 2021). Study nurses enter data directly into electronic tablets with programmed validity checks during study visits. Paper forms are used if tablets are temporarily unavailable. The tablets are regularly synchronised to the server on the ACIPH campus. A web-based dashboard supports data collectors, supervisors and investigators in real time management and monitoring of study activities. At the enrolment visit at the health centre, data are collected on the participant’s socioeconomic status, basic medical and obstetrical history, pregnancy history, maternal morbidity including COVID-19, food security and dietary intake. A dietary quality questionnaire is administered, which has been used in the Ethiopian context.39 A basic abdominal obstetric ultrasound (GE VScan Access) is performed by a trained research nurse at the enrolment visit for pregnancy dating. An intensive ultrasonography training and standardisation was performed by General Electric, Ethiopian Radiography Association and sonographers from Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital (Boston, Massachusetts). Sonographers measure crown-rump length, biparietal diameter (outer to inner), head circumference, femoral length, abdominal circumference in duplicate. Approximately 10% of images are externally reviewed (MS, BJW) for quality control. Maternal and infant anthropometrics are measured by research staff (nurses, data collectors) at baseline and follow-up visits (table 3). Maternal weight is measured with a digital scale (ADE M317600, Germany; precision 100 g) and height is measured using an adult stadiometer (Shorr Productions HeightLite). All measurements are performed two times, with a third measurement done if the difference is greater than the minimal acceptable difference defined by INTERGROWTH 21st.40 Study nurses and data collectors are trained and standardised in anthropometric measurements at the start of the study and every 6 months. During the follow-up ANC visits at the health centre, research staff interview women about their health status, morbidity, pregnancy history/complications, counselling/services received, maternal mental health screen and dietary intake. Data are abstracted from routine ANC records, including blood pressure, laboratory testing results and management. Maternal weight and MUAC are measured. In a subset of women, a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire for ~70 food items is administered at ANC visits. Haemoglobin is measured at enrolment and third trimester ANC visits (HemoCue 301 c). Venous haemoglobin is measured if blood is already being drawn for other purposes, and otherwise capillary haemoglobin is measured. Adherence to each nutritional supplement is assessed at ANC visits. The participant is asked to bring the used IFA bottle, salt container and BEP sachets back to the health centre at each ANC visit. Pill or empty sachet count is done, and the salt container weighed. The participant is also asked to recall the number of sachets and/or pills that were taken in the last 7 days, and since the last visit. For mothers who do not attend scheduled ANC visits, a home visit is made by a data collector to assess adherence and conduct pill/sachet counts and remind the mother to return for ANC and study visits. A repeat ultrasound is performed in the third trimester to monitor fetal growth and assess the position of the baby. If the fetus is determined to be in non-vertex positioning at the third trimester scan, the nurse recommends that the women deliver in the nearest hospital with caesarean section capacity. Participants who deliver in health facilities are assessed by research staff based in health centres or hospitals as soon as possible after birth, but within 72 hours of life. Data are gathered from women and from chart review about the delivery and immediate postpartum period. Medical records are reviewed for intrapartum course (eg, vital signs, duration of labour), delivery complications and maternal/neonatal morbidity. For deliveries that occur at home, a home visit is made by research staff as soon as possible on birth notification (within 72 hours). Maternal history is obtained per self-report regarding delivery history/complications, and postpartum maternal/neonatal morbidity. Infant weight is measured using a high quality, precise digital infant scale (ADE M112600, Germany; precision 5 g). Infant length is measured using a portable infantometer (Perspective Enterprises PE-RILB-LTWT, Michigan USA, precision 1 mm). Recumbent length is recorded to the last completed (not the nearest) millimetre (mm). Head, chest and MUAC is measured to the nearest mm using insertion tapes (Shorr productions, Maryland USA). Daily calibration checks are made before each use of infant weighing scales, and length boards to ensure accuracy of measurement.41 42 Postnatal visits are made at 4–6 weeks for all participants to collect data on maternal and infant vital status, health, morbidity and anthropometrics. Visits are conducted primarily at the health centre, and home visits are made for those who do not return for follow-up. For infants who follow-up at the health centre for routine postnatal care or immunisations, study visits are additionally conducted at 3 and 6 months. Data regarding the costs of delivery of the ENAT study interventions is collected in all study arms. Costs of interventions include three components: system-level costs, costs incurred by health workers for participating in the interventions and costs incurred by individual patients and families. At the system level, costs are captured using the WHO framework 43 using modified survey tools based on our published survey instruments, cost estimation protocols and procedures that have been validated and used in other LMICs (eg, Rwanda, India);44–46 Costs incurred by health workers for receiving training include time or money spent for participating in training sessions. For all time spent, monetary value is assigned based on their average hourly wage. Costs incurred by patients include costs or time spent for received care or home visits. For visits in health facilities, we collect self-reported cost data from patients. In a subset of consenting women, additional biospecimens will be collected for future analysis. These specimens are shown in online supplemental web table 5. Data collected in this study will enable us to conduct a comprehensive analysis of the impact of interventions randomised at the health centre and individual level. The detailed Statistical Analysis Plan of the ENAT study is published separately at: https://addiscontinentaleduet/. In brief, our statistical approach will have multiple steps. We will describe the health centres and pregnant women enrolled in the study and conduct a descriptive quantitative analysis of variables at multiple levels to assess the degree to which our randomisation scheme resulted in similar subpopulations of pregnant women. We will assess the receipt of and adherence to interventions offered, conduct descriptive analyses of the primary and secondary outcomes, compare the outcomes between intervention groups, assess potential effect modifiers and conduct prespecified subgroup and sensitivity analyses. We have estimated the effect size detectable with 80% power under a cluster-randomised design, with six health centres per study arm. Fixing recruitment of pregnant women to 18 months, we estimated that within this time period the average health centre in the proposed study site would enrol around 200 women into ANC at ≤24 weeks gestation and would yield 112 live born infants weighed within 72 hours of life (assuming~70% of enrolled pregnancies result in a live birth and ~80% are followed-up and weighed within 72 hours). Beyond the above determination of average cluster size, we have additionally made the following assumptions in order to estimate effect sizes detectable with 80% power: (1) mean birth weight and SD as per prior studies in Gondor (mean birth weight of 2900 g, SD 450 g) and (2) variation in distribution of weight between clusters as reflected through an coefficient of variation (k=0.01).47 In total this includes 2400 pregnant mothers enrolled in 12 health centres, resulting in 1440 live births with a birth weight within 72 hours. This sample size provides 80% power to detect a 66 g difference in birth weight between the ENAT EIMP or routine care group in a marginal analysis (ie, irrespective of whether mothers did or did not receive the ENP), and a 90 g difference between ENP versus routine care (marginal analysis). With the assumptions of clusters and enrolment above, we assumed mean infant length of 49.5 cm (SD 2.4) (based on data from Malawi 48 49 and coefficient of variation k=0.008 (sector level variation in JiVitA study).47 For the EIMP versus routine care comparison, we would have 80% power to detect a 3.0 mm difference in mean infant length. For the ENP versus non-ENP comparison (marginal analysis) we would have 80% power to detect a 7.8 mm difference in infant length between the women receiving the package of enhanced nutrition-infection compared with standard nutrition care. An external Study Monitoring Committee (SMC) is established to monitor the progress of the study, including enrolment, progress indicators and adverse events. The SMC includes an independent Ethiopian obstetrician (Dr Delayehu Bekele) and an epidemiologist (Professor Simon Cousens). The committee met before study initiation, at mid-enrolment and every 6 months to review study progress. Interim analysis will not be performed.