# Feasibility and acceptability of integrating mass distribution of azithromycin to children 1–11 months into a trachoma mass drug administration campaign to reduce child mortality in Côte d’Ivoire

**Authors:** Lisa Dulli, Fatoumata Touré, Adam Djima Mama, Emily Evens, Kate Murray, Norbert N’goran Djè, Stéphane Koné, Pat Sadate-Ngatchou, Anoma Bovary, Marga Eichleay, Milenka Jean-Baptiste, Aboulaye Méité

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0003426 · PLOS Global Public Health · 2024-07-10

## TL;DR

This study tested giving azithromycin to infants during a trachoma campaign in Côte d’Ivoire and found it was both feasible and well-accepted by parents and health workers.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates the feasibility and acceptability of integrating azithromycin distribution to infants under 6 months into trachoma campaigns.

## Key findings

- 90.2% of 1–5 month-olds received azithromycin during the pilot, indicating high feasibility.
- Adverse reactions were rare, mild, and self-limited, with 1% of infants affected.
- Qualitative feedback showed high acceptability among parents, drug distributors, and supervisors.

## Abstract

Evidence suggests that bi-annual mass drug administration (MDA) of single-dose azithromycin to 1–11 month-old children reduces child mortality in high child-mortality settings. Several countries conduct annual MDAs to distribute azithromycin to individuals ages 6 months and older to prevent trachoma infection. This study examined the feasibility and acceptability of reaching 1–11 months-old children during a trachoma MDA in Côte d’Ivoire by extending azithromycin distribution to infants 1–5 months old during the campaign. In November 2020, the study piloted single-dose azithromycin for 1–5 month-olds during a trachoma MDA in one health district. Monitoring data included the number of children reached and occurrences of adverse drug reactions. Feasibility, the extent to which the target population received the intervention (coverage), was assessed through a population-based, household survey with parents/caregivers of eligible children conducted after the MDA. Acceptability was explored through in-depth interviews (IDIs) with parents/caregivers of eligible children, focus group discussions (FGDs) with community drug distributors (CDDs), and IDIs with their supervisors. CDD FGDs and supervisor IDIs also documented implementation challenges and recommendations for scale-up. 1,735 1–5 month-olds received azithromycin during the pilot activity (estimated population coverage of 90.2%). Adverse drug reactions were reported for 1% (n = 18) infants; all were mild and self-limited. The post-MDA coverage survey interviewed 267 parents/caregivers; survey-based intervention coverage was 95.4% of 1–5 month-olds. Qualitative data revealed high intervention acceptability among parents, CDDs, and supervisors. Implementation challenges included the need to weigh babies to calculate dosage for 1–5 month-olds and the need to obtain written informed consent from parents to provide the drug to 1–5 month-olds. CDDs also indicated the need for more information on azithromycin and possible side effects during training. Delivering azithromycin to younger infants appears acceptable to parents and implementers; >90% coverage indicates feasibility to integrate into a trachoma MDA. (Clinicaltrials.gov ID number: NCT04617626).

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** azithromycin (PubChem CID 447043)
- **Diseases:** trachoma (MONDO:0001249)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (taxon 9606)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Adverse drug reactions (MESH:D064420), CDD (MESH:C567275), trachoma (MESH:D014141)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

37 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11236188/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11236188