Bronchiolitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Bronchiolitis All-study, SE-Norway What is the Optimal Inhalation Treatment for Children 0-12 Months With Acute Bronchiolitis?
Bronchiolitis is a common lower respiratory disease typically affecting infants and children
generally younger than 2 years of age. The disease leads to hospital admissions, is a major
cause for hospitalisation of young children and infants during winter epidemics, may be
severe sometimes requiring ventilatory support and rarely death. The clinical disease as
described by Court is characterised by nasal flaring, tachypnoea, dyspnoea, chest
recessions, crepitations and sometimes sibiliations. Respiratory Syncytial virus is the most
common cause, but also other respiratory vira may cause the disease. Bronchiolitis is a well
known risk factor of asthma development in childhood1,2.
Management is generally supportive, whereas symptom reducing therapy is debated with no
international consensus. Furthermore, there are many unresolved questions related to the
prognosis of bronchiolitis, its role in development of chronic lung disease in particular
regarding the association between early bronchiolitis and asthma development. The present
project will particularly focus on: 1)Treatment efficacy related to various outcomes during
active disease, 2) retrospectively assess treatment efficacy in relation to later
development of allergic disease, 3) assess the role between different vira and asthma
prognosis as well as 4) identify possible prognostic factors involved in the progression
from bronchiolitis to further airways disease.
OVERALL AIMS OF THE STUDY:
1. To compare the efficacy of two common treatments by determining whether inhalation
treatment with racemic adrenaline is more effective than saline inhalations in acute
bronchiolitis in children younger than 12 months throughout an hospital admission, as
well as to define the optimal inhalation treatment intervals.
2. To identify clinical and virological risk factors for development of persisting
obstructive airways disease after an initial bronchiolitis, and to assess if specific
vira or subsequent asthma development influences the efficacy of bronchiolitis
management.
3. To assess whether hospital admissions for bronchiolitis has increased in parallel with
the increase in childhood asthma seen in the last 10-15 years.
METHODS AND STUDY PROGRESSION
Design:
This multicenter study will be performed after initial appropriate common training by all
participating.
1. Treatment study: The study will follow the standard operating procedure of Good
Clinical Practice, including a clinical monitor from Oslo University Hospital, Ullevål
who will provide study quality assurance in all centers. Two main groups randomised
into RA vs saline, each divided into two arms of the active drug/NaCl groups: fixed or
on demand inhalations. The trial will be double blinded by the pharmacy. One glass with
sufficient medication for the entire hospital stay will be designated per patient
throughout. No cross-over. Outcomes will be analysed by intention to treat, with
treatment given and recorded throughout the hospital admission. No interim analyses are
planned since the study compares two established treatment modalities used for the last
decades.
Inclusion into the treatment study provides the basis for the follow-up (prognosis)
part of the study.
2. Prognosis: 18 months follow-up study (clinical assessment) of all subjects in the
treatment study.The prognosis study will also retrospectively answer whether treatment
efficacy depend upon later allergic disease development.
3. Epidemiology: a retrospective chart study for hospital admissions for bronchiolitis
within populations referred to the collaborating centres in HSØ from 1995-2009
Methods:
a. Treatment: Randomisation: block randomisation. Randomization will be performed by
computer programs by the ORAACLE statistician, and provided to the Pharmacy preparing and
labeling the vials for each patient.
Treatment: Nebulised racemic adrenaline vs saline throughout the hospital stay. Inhalations
given on demand (parents/nurse) vs fixed x 4--12. Open saline inhalations may be given at
any time, other inhalations is not allowed. Neither is systemic corticosteroids (which is
not a proper treatment for acute bronchiolitis, according to Norwegian guidelines). All
other treatment will be given according to usual local practice.
Study end-points:
1. Treatment study: Completion of the study at discharge + possible re-admission according
to protocol. Need for intensive care management or assisted ventilation (continuous
CPAP-Ventilator) in which conventional management will be given. Treatment failure when
the child is assessed severely ill and in need of open label treatment. These data will
be recorded and analysed to see if there is a difference between the two treatment
groups. We expect a small number of drop-outs, which should not make it necessary to
expand the study above our goal of 500 patients.
2. Prognosis study: Number of children with recurrent bronchial obstruction (wheeze),
secondary: asthma diagnosis, the "Oslo severity score".
3. Hospital admissions first time, secondary: re-admissions or multiple admissions
Methods:
Clinical scores will be assessed before and 30 minutes after inhalation the first time, and
subsequently once a day during ordinary doctor visit.
Global clinical assessment completed by nurses and parents will be done every morning and
evening until discharge. Time at start, end and hours with naso-gastric tube feeding as well
need for supplementary oxygen will be recorded daily and complications and adverse event
will be recorded as they appear.
Nasopharynx aspiration is done at inclusion and is analysed by local routine, usually within
24 hours (except Sundays). Half of the aspirate will be frozen for batch PCR analyses at the
virological laboratory (Oslo University Hospital) after all patients are enrolled.
Blood tests are sampled at inclusion. General analyses (see table 6) and sample to biobank
for epigenetic analyses.
Saliva are sampled at inclusion and the following morning. Deemed fit for discharge will be
decided by the attending physician. Minimum requirement is clinical score 3 or less at least
2 hours after last inhalation.
Urine tests are sampled at inclusion. Will be analysed at leukotrienes and arachidonic acid
metabolites (eoxines) and other relevant inflammatory and infection markers.
Outcomes measured upon inclusion, after first inhalation (clinical score) as well as
throughout the hospital stay according to flow-chart.
Main outcome: No of hours before deemed fit for discharge from hospital
Secondary:
Need for feeding support (no. of hours) Need for supplementary oxygen. Clinical score
throughout admission Complications (presence of and time to confirmed) such as atelectasis
Global assessments (parents and nurses) Need for ICU treatment Data from each hospital will
in addition to collated data analysis be assessed independently.
Illness caused by different vira will be compared in regard to treatment efficacy.
b. Prognosis: This follow-up-study will be performed in collaboration between the principal
investigator and the collaborating physicians at the local paediatric departments. The
clinical follow-up visit includes a structured parental interview, application of the "Oslo
severity score"20 for obstructive airways disease, assessment of atopic eczema and rhinitis,
skin prick test as well as blood sampling for analyses including IgE and DNA for epigenetic
studies (see table 4) .
c. Epidemiology: Retrospective study of all children 0-18 months admitted to hospital with
the diagnosis of bronchiolitis. The study will mainly be a hospital registry study, but with
20% random chart scrutiny to ensure appropriateness of diagnosis.
Ammendment: Two further substudies were included;
a) Quality of life after bronchiolitis b) A population-based control group of 241 children
from Oslo and Fredrikstad were included.
1. Description Quality of Life:
ITQOL was sent to all children included in the RCT cohort, as well as the control group
(see below) 6-9 months after enrollement in the study, as well as prior to the 18-month
follow-up study.
Main objective: To assess if quality of life after acute bronchiolitis in infancy is
associated with development of persisting obstructive airways disease or allergic
disease in early childhood.
Specific aim 1: What is the quality of life in infants and parents 6 and 18 months
after hospital admission for acute bronchiolitis? Specific aim 2: Is quality of life in
infants and their parents 6 and 18 months after hospital admission for acute
bronchiolitis related to recurrent or persisting obstructive airways symptoms? Specific
aim 3: Is a possible association between quality of life and persistent obstructive
airways disease modified by allergic sensitisation, gender or type of virus infection
during the bronciolitis
2. Description Control group:
Since we established the "Bronchiolitis" cohort of children admitted to hospital for acute
bronchiolitis, the prognostic perspective of this three-phase study has gained increasing
focus. This relates in particular to immunological influence of different viral agents
during the acute disease, as well as Quality of Life and the role of early "stress" in
relation to development of allergic diseases in children with as well as without acute
bronchiolitis in early life.
The aims are to assess physiological, immunological, environmental and "stress" (including
psychosocial) factors in the development of allergic diseases, including asthma, atopic
eczema, allergic rhinitis and allergies in children who have been hospital admitted due to
acute bronchiolitis in infancy as well as children of the same age who have not been
admitted for bronchiolitis.
Control children will be consecutively included at 2 Well-baby clinics in Fredrikstad and
Oslo, respectively, total number 150 (100 + 150, respectively) ensuring similar variability
of demographic data (age and ethnic background) as the enrolled bronchiolitis children.
Inclusion will be assessed mid-way for adequate demographic variability.
Inclusion criteria: children 1- 11 months (inclusive) of age presenting to the Well-Baby
Clinics, Exclusion criteria: Significant cardiac, previous severe respiratory disease,
neurologic, immunologic, oncologic or other disease that may significantly influence the
outcomes, including Down's syndrome.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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