Pneumonia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pneumonia in Children: Aetiology, Ideal Antibiotic Duration, Quality of Life
To determine, in children hospitalized with pneumonia, if an extended duration of oral
antibiotics (10 days) will be superior to a shorter duration (3 days) of antibiotics in
improving clinical outcomes.
Secondary Aims:
1. Describe the prevalence of respiratory viruses and bacteria at presentation.
2. Investigate the depression, anxiety and stress scores (DASS21) and quality of life
scored (QOL) by parents of the children during admission, pre-discharge and post
discharge and at follow-ups.
Introduction:
Pneumonia is the single largest cause of death in children less than 5 years old and these
are preventable deaths.[1,2] It is also an important cause of morbidity , especially when it
is recurrent or severe as it may be linked with future adult lung disease.[3] Determining the
aetiology of pneumonia is difficult in children who cannot produce satisfactory sputum for
culture. Hence the reliance on molecular methods like polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and
Enzyme immunoassays(EIA) looking at serological rise to determine the true aetiology of
pneumonia is important especially in the era where mixed infections are common and may be
associated with severe infections.
There is currently no information on the suitable duration of antibiotics for uncomplicated
severe community acquired pneumonia (CAP). There is also rampant overuse of antibiotics that
results in poor compliance and significant side effects.
There is little information on the QOL of the child with severe pneumonia and his parent. It
is important to have a holistic approach to medicine hence the importance of analyzing the
burden and social issues associated with children admitted with pneumonia.
As opposed to adults, children cannot produce sputum (lower respiratory sample) appropriate
for culture which is the traditional method of identifying the causative bacteria.
Identification of bacteria in nasopharyngeal secretions (upper respiratory sample) does not
equate to that organism causing the infection as the upper airway of a child is often
colonized by bacteria. Detecting the organism in blood identifies it as the causative
organism. However, blood culture has a very low yield in children with pneumonia and
polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is much more sensitive at detecting bacteria in blood and
hence it will markedly improve the ability to determine infecting organism.
Development of our own in-house bacterial PCR kit which will detect several different
bacteria in blood is planned in this study. We already have an in-house viral PCR kit and the
ability to detect atypical bacteria via EIA. Currently there is an international study
(Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health [PERCH]) looking at aetiology of pneumonia, but
this study only involves 2 Asian countries (Thailand and Bangladesh)[5]. In Malaysia, in 2011
there was a study that looked at pneumococcal isolates and antibiotic sensitivity patterns on
invasive pneumococcal disease only[6]. There are also studies that look at viral aetiology of
pneumonia[7]. Hence information on aetiology of pneumonia is skewed to those involving
vaccine associated organisms and use of nasopharyngeal secretions(NPS) to detect viruses..
The evidence for appropriate duration of antibiotics that should be used in hospitalized
children with pneumonia is scarce. A randomized controlled trial comparing traditional
duration of antibiotics (≥ 7 days) versus shorter duration of antibiotics < 7 days) is what
we think is necessary. There are no studies looking at duration of antibiotics in children
with severe uncomplicated pneumonia. We hypothesize that there is no need for a longer
duration of antibiotics which are only associated with poor compliance and unnecessary
side-effects.
Finally, there is little data on quality of life in children and parents during and after a
pneumonic episode. It is important to measure the impact of such a common disease on both
parent and patient as well as to assess the impact of medical management on QOL so as to have
a more holistic approach to medicine. Two previous studies have looked at QOL. One was a
study comparing all acute diseases to chronic diseases[8]. The other looked at CAP but
without the use of structured questionnaires[9]
Methodology
Randomized, Double Blind, Placebo Controlled Trial Children aged 3 months till <5 years old
Admitted to University Malaya Medical Centre (UMMC) hospital with a severe community acquired
pneumonia Eligibility Ages Eligible for Study: 3 Months to 59 Months Genders Eligible for
Study: Both
Inclusion Criteria:
Children admitted with severe pneumonia as defined by the presence of all the following as
defined as below:
- 3 months to 59 months old
- History of cough and/or shortness of breath Unwell for <= 7 days
- Increased respiratory rate ( ≥ 50/min if ≤12 months old, ≥ 40/min)
- Any of the following signs/symptoms are present at examination that would necessitate
admission: chest retractions, cyanosis, saturation< 92% on air, poor feeding or lethargy
- Documented fever (axillary /central temp ≥ 38/38.5°C) within 24 hrs of admission
- Abnormal chest radio graph(CXR) with presence of alveolar infiltrates
- Responds to IV antibiotics by the first 72 hrs and able to go home with oral antibiotics
i.e. no more hypoxia and afebrile and reduced respiratory symptoms
Exclusion Criteria:
Children who (a) are transferred from another hospital (b) refuse blood taking (c) have a
doctor diagnosis of asthma or recurrent wheezing illness (d) have a diagnosis of
bronchiolitis i.e. wheezing in a child with a CXR with no consolidation (e) do not have an
acute illness ( ie >7 days) (f) are unable to come for follow-up (g) do not have community
acquired pneumonia e.g. aspiration pneumonia (h)have a complicated pneumonia with effusion,
pneumothorax, clinical suspicion of necrotizing pneumonia (i)require paediatric intensive
care unit (PICU) admission or use of non-invasive ventilation (j)significant comorbidities
that can increase the risk of having a complicated pneumonia- (k) need other antibiotics like
anti-staph or macrolides (l)have an extra-pulmonary infection e.g. meningitis (m)are allergic
to penicillin (n) are unable to tolerate oral antibiotics and (o)have underlying illness that
can predispose to recurrent pneumonia
Randomized, Double Blind, Placebo Controlled Trial Children aged 3 months till <5 years old
Admitted to UMMC hospital with a severe community acquired pneumonia Informed signed consent
will be obtained from parents first. All children will have full blood count and CXR taken
Additional blood and urine as detailed below will also be taken:
a. Blood for PCR -streptococcus pneumoniae, staphylococcus aureus, Haemophilus influenzae,
Mycoplasma pnuemoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae will be taken.
NPS for respiratory bacteria and viruses (by culture and PCT-similar as above) All these
samples will be tested in our hospital laboratory. If samples cannot be processed
immediately, they will be stored in a -80 deg C freezer except for the NPS for bacterial
culture.
All data will be collected at enrollment and at each follow-up visit on a standardized data
sheet. Baseline demographic data( age, gender, address, ethnicity, household size, income,
parent education, caregivers, household appliances) and medical information( birth history,
breastfeeding and weaning, growth, immunization, smoke exposure, co-morbidity, daily
hospitalization information) will be obtained from parents and medical charts. CXRs and
routine blood test results will also be recorded.
Quality of life, stress level, severity of illness , of parents and children with pneumonia,
will be assessed at these time points too: during their admission (average of 3-5 days) and
during follow-ups( average at, 4 weeks, 3 months(phone call only with no questionnaire
administered), 6 months, 1 year post their pneumonic episode) using the following
questionnaires-Paediatric proxy cough quality of life-8 (PCQOL-8), Canadian Acute Respiratory
Illness and Flu Scale (CARIFS) (in hospital only), cough diary( at home, daily for 1
month),Depression Anxiety Stress Scale 21( DASS21).
The PCQOL-8 and DASS21 have been translated and validated in Bahasa Melayu. The CARIFS and
the cough diary was recently translated in Bahasa Melayu and piloted for the purpose of this
study.
Treatments will be administered only after at least 48-72 hrs of intravenous(IV) antibiotics
( penicillin/ampicillin/ amoxicillin-clavulanate acid/cefuroxime) and the patients are ready
for discharge : afebrile, improved respiratory symptoms and signs, saturation > 92% in air
and ready to be converted to oral antibiotics.
Arm 1: Twice a day oral amoxicillin-clavulanate (22.5mg/kg/dose) for 10 days Arm 2: Twice a
day oral amoxicillin-clavulanate (22.5mg/kg/dose) for 3 days followed by oral placebo for 7
days The random treatments will be allocated via computer generated number sequence and will
be supervised by a statistician.
All medications will be prepared and dispensed by the pharmacy department in suspension form.
The appearance of the placebo will be similar to the active medication. Investigators and
subjects will be blinded.
At discharge, parents will be asked to fill up a daily cough diary at home. Treatment
failure/exit criteria will be fulfilled if any of the following occur: death, recrudescence
of fever ≥38 °C (axilla) with respiratory signs of pneumonia, hypoxaemia < 92% on air), need
for antibiotic treatment, new CXR changes.
On discharge, children will be followed up at regular intervals of 4 weeks, 3 moths(phone
call), 6 months and 1 year, to ensure they are well and also to detect residual or recurring
respiratory symptoms i.e. presence of cough/breathlessness/fever, recrudescence of pneumonia
and other respiratory illness, fever and upper respiratory tract infection(URTI), growth,
need for unscheduled healthcare visits for respiratory symptoms, need for antibiotic
treatments for respiratory/upper airway symptoms, abnormal physical findings, over a period
of 1 year post-discharge from hospital. Adverse effects of antibiotics e.g. vomiting,
diarrhoea, rash and adherence (returned empty bottles) to medication will be recorded.
CXR will be repeated at 4 weeks and at 1 year(if clinically indicated). These will be scored
by a radiologist who will be masked to allotted treatment.
At 12 months, if the age allows it, children will be asked to perform lung function tests.
During these follow-ups they will be given questionnaires: PCQOL-8, DASS21. At the 4 week
discharge, CXR as well as blood and NPS will be collected for testing for bacterial and viral
organisms. At 4 weeks, daily cough diaries will be collected back and reviewed.
Sample size calculation is based on the primary aim. We expect a 20% superiority difference
in the extended antibiotic regime and assuming a 20% drop-out, sample size should be 204
children (102 in each arm).
Data will be presented in accordance with the CONSORT guidelines on reporting on RCTs.
Analysis will be done by Dr. Rafdzah, a statistician. An intention to treat approach will be
used for all analyses. For the primary aim i.e. the clinical outcome of the different
antibiotic durations, the main outcomes being looked at are (a) clinical cure-complete
resolution of symptoms and signs at 4 weeks ,(b) proportion of children without chronic
respiratory symptoms or signs at the 12 month follow-up , using odds ratio(95%CI) with
logistic regression and linear regression. For continuous variables, t-tests and Mann-Whitney
tests will be used depending on the normality of the data. A Kaplan-Meier curve will be
constructed for each group for the time to next respiratory illness and hospitalization and
proportions will be compared by regression models. For prevalence of respiratory pathogens,
point prevalence will be reported on and multivariable logistic regression adjusting for
baseline carriage and antibiotic resistance will examine the effects of treatment duration on
the different organisms particularly Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae and
Staph aureus.
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