Current diarrhea management strategies in low- and middle-income countries (oral
rehydration solution, ReSoMal and zinc) focus primarily on the management of dehydration
and micronutrient replacement and appear to have negligible impact in preventing future
diarrheal episodes or improving nutritional outcomes. Lactoferrin and lysozyme are
milk-derived nutritional supplements that may reduce the risk of diarrheal episodes and
accelerate nutritional recovery by treating or preventing underlying enteric infections
and/or improving enteric function. Children with moderate or severe wasting are at
particularly high-risk of death, diarrhea recurrence, and nutritional deterioration
following a diarrheal episode. This factorial, double-blind, placebo-controlled,
randomized trial aims to determine the efficacy of lactoferrin and lysozyme
supplementation in decreasing diarrhea incidence and improving nutritional recovery in
children convalescing from diarrhea and wasting. We will explore whether these
interventions improve outcomes by reducing enteric pathogens, improving enteric function
and/or increasing hemoglobin concentrations in these children. This study aims to enroll
600 Kenyan children aged 6-24 months from facilities in Western Kenya. Enrolled children
will be randomized to 16-weeks of lactoferrin, lysozyme, a combination of the two, or
placebo and be followed up for 24 weeks total, with bi-weekly home visits by community
health workers and clinic visits at 4, 10, 16, and 24 weeks. Results of this study will
inform management strategies for children with moderate/severe wasting at high risk for
mortality, morbidity, and nutritional deterioration following diarrhea.
Aim 1: To determine whether a 16-week course of lactoferrin, lysozyme or a combination of
both shortens time to WHO-defined recovery from wasting (MUAC ≥12.5cm) and reduces the
incidence of moderate-to-severe diarrhea during the subsequent 6-months following
presentation to a health facility with diarrhea among children with moderate/severe
childhood wasting (MUAC <12.5 cm at the time of screening).
Hypothesis: Children randomized to lactoferrin, lysozyme, or the combination of both will
experience a lower incidence of moderate-to-severe diarrhea and an earlier recovery from
wasting (increased MUAC) over the subsequent 6-months than placebo-treated children.
Combination therapy will provide synergistic benefit in reducing diarrhea and improving
nutritional recovery.
Aim 2: To explore whether a 16-week course of lactoferrin, lysozyme or combination
therapy improves secondary clinical, nutritional, enteric pathogen, and enteric function
outcomes.
Hypothesis: Children randomized to lactoferrin, lysozyme, or the combination will
experience fewer hospitalizations and deaths, improved linear growth, a reduced
prevalence of specific enteric bacteria associated with linear growth failure
(Campylobacter, LT-ETEC, EAEC, typical EPEC and/or Shigella), improved markers of enteric
dysfunction (myeloperoxidase, alpha antitrypsin, neopterin, and the lactulose:rhamnose
ratio) and improved hemoglobin, as compared to placebo-treated children.
Aim 3: To evaluate acceptability, adherence and cost-effectiveness of lactoferrin and/or
lysozyme in Kenya.
Hypothesis: Both therapies will be highly acceptable to caregivers and health workers.
Adherence to the therapies will be high among participants (≥ 95%). Lactoferrin and
lysozyme, alone and in combination, will be more cost-effective interventions for
reducing moderate-to-severe diarrhea in the short-term as compared to the
standard-of-care.