Neuroprotective Efficacy of Postnatal Magnesium Sulphate in Term Infants With Birth Asphyxia

NCT ID: NCT05707962

Last Updated: 2025-09-30

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

178 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2023-03-24

Study Completion Date

2023-08-10

Brief Summary

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Birth/Perinatal asphyxia in Pakistan continues to be a leading cause of neonatal mortality and morbidity. It is estimated that around 80 to 120,000 neonates either suffer from or die from birth/perinatal asphyxia every year. In addition to the large number of deaths a larger number of babies who survive suffer from neuro-developmental disorders adding to the health burden to the society and the nation.

To date other than prevention (which requires global efforts to improve maternal education and health care) the therapies available to treat infants who have suffered from birth asphyxia have been either technically too complex or extremely expensive.

Detailed Description

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Birth/Perinatal asphyxia in Pakistan continues to be a leading cause of neonatal mortality and morbidity. It is estimated that around 80 to 120,000 neonates either suffer from or die from birth/perinatal asphyxia every year. In addition to the large number of deaths a larger number of babies who survive suffer from neuro-developmental disorders adding to the health burden to the society and the nation.

To date other than prevention (which requires global efforts to improve maternal education and health care) the therapies available to treat infants who have suffered from birth asphyxia have been either technically too complex or extremely expensive.

Recent evidence from animal studies and small human studies it has become clear that giving Magnesium Sulphate to term or nearterm babies with moderate to severe birth/perinatal asphyxia reduces both mortality and morbidity.

Magnesium Sulphate as a drug has been in clinical use for decades; its pharmacokinetics, safety profile and mode of action are well known. It is cheap and readily available in Pakistan thus providing an opportunity to confirm or refute the efficacy of Magnesium Sulphate in birth/perinatal asphyxia.

With this in mind the following pragmatic study has been designed using the current practices and available resources:

Conditions

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Birth Asphyxia

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

All babies with moderate or severe Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy fulfilling the inclusion criteria will be randomized to receive either the standard treatment (oxygen and fluid therapy along with anticonvulsants if required) plus 3.0 ml/kg of 10% dextrose water given over 30 minutes, three dose given 24 hours apart or to receive standard treatment PLUS three doses of Magnesium Sulphate infusion given over 30 minutes at 250 mg/kg per dose given 24 hours apart. The volume of infusion shall be adjusted with 10% dextrose water to make it
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

DOUBLE

Participants Caregivers
As soon as parental consent has been obtained the baby will be allocated to one arm of the study using randomly shuffled sealed brown envelopes containing the allocation arm

Study Groups

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intervention group

All babies with moderate or severe Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy fulfilling the inclusion criteria will be randomized to receive either the standard treatment (oxygen and fluid therapy along with anticonvulsants if required) plus 3.0 ml/kg of 10% dextrose water given over 30 minutes, three dose given 24 hours apart or to receive standard treatment PLUS three doses of Magnesium Sulphate infusion given over 30 minutes at 250 mg/kg per dose given 24 hours apart. The volume of infusion shall be adjusted with 10% dextrose water to make it

up to 3.0 ml. The resulting reconstituted solution for intravenous infusion shall be 8.3% Magnesium Sulphate delivered over 30 minutes at a rate of 0.1 ml/kg/minute i.e. 8.3 mg/kg/minute. The treatment should be started as soon after birth as possible and not later than 24 hours of life. The babies who meet the exclusion criteria will not be continued into the study.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Magnesium sulfate

Intervention Type DRUG

All babies with moderate or severe Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy fulfilling the inclusion criteria will be randomized to receive either the standard treatment (oxygen and fluid therapy along with anticonvulsants if required) plus 3.0 ml/kg of 10% dextrose water given over 30 minutes, three dose given 24 hours apart or to receive standard treatment PLUS three doses of Magnesium Sulphate infusion given over 30 minutes at 250 mg/kg per dose given 24 hours apart. The volume of infusion shall be adjusted with 10% dextrose water to make it

up to 3.0 ml. The resulting reconstituted solution for intravenous infusion shall be 8.3% Magnesium Sulphate delivered over 30 minutes at a rate of 0.1 ml/kg/minute i.e. 8.3 mg/kg/minute. The treatment should be started as soon after birth as possible and not later than 24 hours of life. The babies who meet the exclusion criteria will not be continued into the study.

non intervention group

All babies with moderate or severe Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy fulfilling the inclusion criteria will be randomized to receive either the standard treatment (oxygen and fluid therapy along with anticonvulsants if required) plus 3.0 ml/kg of 10% dextrose water given over 30 minutes, three dose given 24 hours apart or to receive standard treatment PLUS three doses of Magnesium Sulphate infusion given over 30 minutes at 250 mg/kg per dose given 24 hours apart. The volume of infusion shall be adjusted with 10% dextrose water to make it

up to 3.0 ml. The resulting reconstituted solution for intravenous infusion shall be 8.3% Magnesium Sulphate delivered over 30 minutes at a rate of 0.1 ml/kg/minute i.e. 8.3 mg/kg/minute. The treatment should be started as soon after birth as possible and not later than 24 hours of life. The babies who meet the exclusion criteria will not be continued into the study.

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

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Magnesium sulfate

All babies with moderate or severe Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy fulfilling the inclusion criteria will be randomized to receive either the standard treatment (oxygen and fluid therapy along with anticonvulsants if required) plus 3.0 ml/kg of 10% dextrose water given over 30 minutes, three dose given 24 hours apart or to receive standard treatment PLUS three doses of Magnesium Sulphate infusion given over 30 minutes at 250 mg/kg per dose given 24 hours apart. The volume of infusion shall be adjusted with 10% dextrose water to make it

up to 3.0 ml. The resulting reconstituted solution for intravenous infusion shall be 8.3% Magnesium Sulphate delivered over 30 minutes at a rate of 0.1 ml/kg/minute i.e. 8.3 mg/kg/minute. The treatment should be started as soon after birth as possible and not later than 24 hours of life. The babies who meet the exclusion criteria will not be continued into the study.

Intervention Type DRUG

Other Intervention Names

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neuroprotective agent

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Term and near term infants (≥35 weeks gestation) with moderate to severe birth asphyxia Age at admission \< 24 hours

Exclusion Criteria

* Babies who could not be given first injection before 24 hours of age

Infants with major congenital malformations, sepsis, congenital heart defects, Intracranial hemorrhage and surgical problems

Babies received intubated in emergency

Babies receiving therapeutic hypothermia

Infants with disorders of metabolism

Infants in whom cause other than asphyxia is established as the reason for not initiating or sustaining breathing at birth.
Minimum Eligible Age

1 Hour

Maximum Eligible Age

24 Hours

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University of Health Sciences Lahore

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Komal Khadim Hussain

principal investigator

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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dr sikandar hayat, MBBS, FCPS

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

children hospital Lahore

Locations

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services hospital Pakistan

Lahore, Punjab Province, Pakistan

Site Status

Countries

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Pakistan

Other Identifiers

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IRB/2022/1018/SIMS

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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