Title: Zinc supplementation in the treatment of diarrhoeal disease
1Zinc supplementation in the treatment of
diarrhoeal disease
Incorporating new global recommendations into
country-level policy and action
Paulo Froes, MD, MPH, PgD OH S UNICEF/TACRO,
Health and Nutrition/Immunization Plus
2Zinc supplementation clinical evidence
- Randomised placebo-controlled clinical trials
evaluating the impact of zinc supplementation
during acute and persistent diarrhoea - WHO meeting in New Delhi, India, 2001 convened to
reviewh the results of all studies available
3Zinc in acute diarrhea
- Reduces duration of diarrhoea episode by up to
25 - Decrease by about 25 the proportion of episodes
lasting more than seven days - It is associated with a 30 reduction in stool
volume - Conclusion significant beneficial impact on the
clinical course of acute diarrhoea reduces both
severity and duration
4Zinc in persistent diarrhoea
- Zinc-supplemented children had
- 24 lower probability of continuing diarrhoea
- 42 lower rate of treatment failure or death
- Conclusion zinc supplementation reduces the
duration and severity of persistent diarrhoea
5Zinc in bloody diarrhoea
- Positive impact of the prevalence of dysentery in
the month following the supplementation - Improves seroconversion to shigellaciddal
antibody response and increases the proportions
of circulating B lymphocytes and plasma cells and
the IgA-specific immunoglobulin response - Conclusion zinc supplementation should be given
as an adjunct to antibiotic treatment of bloody
diarrhoea
6Cost-effectiveness studies
- zinc supplementation significantly improved the
cost-effectiveness of standard management of
diarrhoea for dysenteric as well as
non-dysenteric illness. - Sufficient evidence to recommend the inclusion of
zinc into standard case management of both types
of acute diarrhoea
7The new WHO-UNICEF recommended policies for
health professionals on the treatment of diarrhoea
- Counsel mother to begin administering suitable
home fluids immediately upon onset of diarrhoea
in a child - Treat dehydration with new low osmolarity ORS
solution (or with intravenous electrolyte
solution in cases of severe dehydration) - Emphasize continued feeding or increased
breastfeeding during, and increases feeding
after, the diarrhoeal episode - Use antibiotics only when appropriate, i.e., in
the presence of bloody diarrhoea or shigellosis,
and abstain from administering anti-diarrhoeal
drugs - Provide children with 20 mg per day of zinc
supplementation for 10-14 days (10 mg per day for
infants under six months old) - Advise mothers of the need to increase fluids and
continue feeding during future diarrheoal episodes
8Zinc and Low-osmolarity ORS effective, safe and
available
9Incorporating the new recommendations into the
countrys health policy I
- Identifying and obtaining commitment and support
from key stakeholders - Appropriate departments of MoH (leadership role)
interprogrammatic coordination is key - Ministry of Planning and Finance
- Professional Organizations Medical and
Pediatrics Associations Nurses Association
Pharmacists Association - Private sector Manufacturers of zinc and ORS,
importers and wholesalers, private hospitals and
pharmacies, drug shops, traditional healers - Collaborating partners such as NicaSalud, PATH,
UNICEF, PAHO/WHO, World Bank, USAID, other NGOs
10Incorporating the new recommendations into the
countrys health policy II
- Gathering clinical and scientific evidence
- Endorsing the new recommendations
- Revising/updating existing policies
11Available in English, Spanish and French
12Implementation issues new ORS and zinc
supplementation
- Product issues
- Supply management issues
- Technical
- Operational
- Monitoring and evaluation
13Product issues
- Dosage
- Each individual dose of zinc should contain 10 mg
or 20 mg of elemental zinc - For syrups, the concentration of elemental zinc
should be either 10 mg/5 ml or 20 mg/5 ml - For tablets, each tablet should contain either 10
mg of 20 mg of elemental zinc. Tablets containing
20 mg of elemental zinc should be scored. - Zinc salt used in to prepare syrups or tablets
for use in the management of diarrhoea should be
soluble in water - Zinc sulphate
- Zinc acetate
- Zinc gluconate
- Type of tablets for use in infants and young
children it is essential that the tablets be
dispersible. It means that the tablets should b e
completely disaggregated in about 30 seconds or
less than 60 seconds in 5 ml of tap water or
breast milk - Taste-masking it is essential that the metallic
taste be totally masked - Costing it is important to keep the cost of the
zinc dose as low as possible. Arbitrarly, it has
been suggested that one dose of zinc not exceed
US 0.02 - Packaging tablets and syrups should be packaged
to provide a full treatment of 10-14 daily doses
of zinc (i.e, for syrups containing 20 mg/5 ml
bottles should contain 50-75 ml of syrup for
tablets, a blister should contain 10-14 tablets). - Shelf life The zinc product should have a shelf
life of at least two years
14Supply management issues I
- Technical
- Revision of medicine regulation
- Revision of the Essential Medicines List (new ORS
included in WHO EML in 2003 zinc salts included
in WHO EML in 2005) - Review of Integrated Management of Childhood
Illness (IMCI) guidelines (WHO/UNICEF) - Training and supervision of health professionals
- Programme communication
- introduction of new treatment which providers and
patients have little or no experience requires
considerable planning for behaviour change
strategies and capacity building at all levels - Multiple approaches to raising public awareness
is recommended - Adhrerence is key with zinc treatment (10-14
days) - Instructions and job aids are strongly
recommended to caregivers
15Supply management issues II
- Operational issues
- Replacement of old ORS no need to withdraw
stocks. Just matter of planning introduction of
new oRS in such a way that both products are not
in circulation concurrently (just to prevent
confusion). Existence of old ORS should not be a
barrier for initiating zinc supplementation - Plan phase-in of zinc treatment phased or
immediate nationwide rollout. Phased lower
costs, ability to test implementation strategies
and correct issues with materials or methods,
uptake of new recommendations in the health
facilities can be monitored and modelled
16Supply management issues III
- Operational issues
- Forecasting of demand and quantification
- Forecasting demand for zinc in the absence of
good morbidity data tentative link with
procurement of ORS, e.g., one patient two
sachets of ORS and 10-14 tablets of 20 mg zinc.It
could underestimate true requirements if
majoroity of cases makes use of home fluids
instead of ORS - Forecasting demand should include team approach
- Local production or international procurement?
- Distribution
- Stock management
- Private sector distribution
- Quality assurance (product efficacy, product
safety pharmacovigilance product quality and
post-marketing surveillance
17Monitoring and Evaluation
- Process indicators
- of health care staff trained in the management
of diarrhoea including new ORS and 10-14 day
treatment with zinc - Zinc and new ORS available at the central storage
facility - of health facilities, storage facilities and
private sector outlets with ORS and zinc
available - of facilities with the revised treatment
guidelines - of cases of diarrhoea in children under five
prescribed of sold zinc and the new ORS - Outcome indicators
- of cases od diarrhoea in children under five
treated with a course of zinc supplementation for
10-14 days, in addition to ORS - Knowledge, attitudes and practices indicators
- of caregivers who are aware that zinc is an
appropriate treatment for diarroeal disease - of medical providers who believe that zinc is
an effective treatment for diarrhoea in children
under the age of five
18Muito Obrigado!