Respiratory Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Unclogging the Pediatric Emergency Room: Impact of Rapid Viral Diagnostics. A Randomized Controlled Trial of Decision Making Based Upon Early (at Triage) Rapid Diagnosis of Respiratory Viral Infections (VIRAP) in Children 3-36 Months of Age Presenting to the Emergency Department (ED) With a Flu-Like Illness.
Acute respiratory tract infections are among the most common problems of childhood,
particularly among infants and children younger than 3 years, and account for most
antibiotic prescriptions to children. Most of these infections are self-limited and do not
require medical intervention; however, the symptoms overlap significantly with those of
severe viral or bacterial infections. At the hospital Emergency Department (ED), medical
assessment, prescription of antibiotics (unnecessarily if the infection is viral), and a
series of investigations (e.g., blood work, X-rays) often take place before a decision on
patient management and possible hospital admission can be made. Such procedures lead to
intense use of human health resources (nursing, laboratory and radiology staff) and hospital
facilities.
The literature suggests that a prompt single viral diagnosis improves decision-making. To
our knowledge, no-one has performed a controlled trial to examine the impact of a rapid,
multi-viral detection test like VIRAP, or the impact of the timing of such a test, on
management of children with flu-like illnesses in the ED.
Our objective is to determine if use of our new viral detection program, VIRAP, for rapid
testing for viral respiratory infections right after triage will improve patient management
and resource use in the ED. We will test the hypothesis that availability of VIRAP at triage
to support rapid diagnosis of viral infection in children at BCCH will (i) reduce the
waiting time in the ED; (ii) improve decision making regarding diagnostic investigations and
specimen collection; and (iii) decrease antibiotic prescriptions.
Study completed and manuscript accepted for publication in the Journal of Pediatrics.
Description of Project:
Background: Acute viral respiratory tract infections are among the most common infectious
problems of childhood during the first five years of life, particularly among infants
younger than 2 years of age. Although the majority of these infections does not require
medical attention and are self-limited in nature, worried parents commonly bring their
children to the emergency department (ED) for evaluation (average 2500 children/winter). EDs
are choke points in the health care system, especially at the peaks of the annual influenza
season and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) season. Without a prompt specific viral
diagnosis in a child presenting to the ED with a febrile respiratory illness, after being
seen by a physician, a child may have to undergo a constellation of precautionary diagnostic
tests (septic work up, CXR) and be prescribed antibiotics unnecessarily. These interventions
lead to prolonged ED stays (average 180min +/-120 min), intense use of human health
resources (nursing, laboratory and radiology staff) resulting in significant cost both
direct and indirect to the health care system, as well as time lost to the children and
their families and contribute to antimicrobial resistance. The precise etiology of these
viral infection episodes can be determined through the use of rapid screening program such
as VIRAP (nasopharyngeal washing for rapid direct viral antigen detection via
immunofluorescence). At the moment VIRAP is a physician ordered test, done only after the
child has been seen by the physician, usually after the child has already been waiting for a
significant length of time, then has to wait further for the results of the test.
Hypothesis: Rapid diagnosis of viral infection through VIRAP initiated by a nurse at triage
wit results available for ED physician time of assessment may influence decision making with
respect to additional investigations therefore reduce the amount of waiting time in the ED,
as well as decrease antibiotic prescriptions. This would ultimately result in improved
effectiveness of service provision for children with febrile respiratory illnesses and in
turn shorten waiting time for all children in the ED. Health care cost reduction by
minimising unnecessary diagnostic tests being performed and antibiotic prescription are also
expected.
Study design: We propose to conduct a single centre, open label, randomized controlled trial
comparing outcomes of patients undergoing VIRAP at triage vs routine ED admission protocol.
During the months of December 2005 to April, and again Dec2006 to April 2007, eligible
patients based on our inclusion and exclusion will be enrolled at triage and randomized in a
1:1 ratio to either undergo NPW for VIRAP and have the result available to the treating
physician at time of assessment or routine admitting protocol to the ED and await physician
assessment without prior investigation.
Criteria: Patients age 3-36 months admitted to the BCCH ED with fever(≥38.5 0C measured in
ED or documented by the accompanying parent) and at least one of: cough, runny nose, nasal
congestion and sore throat will be eligible for enrolment. Excluded from the study will be
patients who are immuno-compromised, who have underlying chronic severe respiratory
conditions (cystic fibrosis, bronchopulmonary dysplasia) or chronic heart conditions
(uncorrected cyanotic heart lesions, prosthetic valves), who have had prior assessment in
our ED department for the current illness. Only one child per family can be enrolled.
End points: The duration of stay in ED (from assessment to discharge, including time waiting
for investigations and review of results by the physician) is the primary endpoint.
Secondary endpoints include whether any investigations following the assessment (blood test,
radiographs or urine tests) were ordered and whether study patients were prescribed
antibiotics.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
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