Pediatric Respiratory Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
Structured Light Plethysmography in Children Admitted Due to Acute Obstructive Airways Disease
Obstructive airways disease is the most common group of acute illnesses leading to hospital
treatment in children. This group consists of different age-related diagnoses, such as
bronchiolitis in infants or wheezing and asthma in older children. Though these entities
overlap with each other, they have common characteristics and the same leading symptom
breathing distress.
The investigators aim conduct an observational cohort study to examine if the clinical course
of respiratory distress be quantified and the treatment improved in children with acute
breathing difficulty using a new non-touch non-invasive SLP measurement device?
Thora3Di is a new CE- and FDA-approved medical device able to measure chest and abdominal
wall movements during tidal breathing with a method called structured light plethysmography
(SLP). The method is non-touch and non- invasive, it does not need any connection with the
child.
One-month- to 12-years-old infants and children are recruited from the paediatric wards at
Evelina London Children's hospital. The child lies or sits within the field of vision of the
SLP device with their chest and abdomen exposed. A grid pattern of normal light will be
projected onto the chest and changes in the format of the grid as the infant or child
breathes will be recorded by the SLP device. Data will be collected for each child for 3-5
minutes once in 24 hour periods for 2-10 times during hospital stay.
The aim is to reduce duration of hospital stay by finding predicting parameters for
obstructive airways diseases with the new SLP method, and further aim to standardization of
treatment strategies, to reduce expenditure.
Cohort pilot study to characterise the chest wall movement during tidal breathing in children
admitted due to acute obstructive airways disease, using non-invasive SLP methodology
(Thora3DiTM).
The investigators propose to utilise the SLP in children admitted for obstructive airways
disease and track progression of their condition during the hospital stay. Focus will be in
the SLP output, and investigators aim to 1) quantify the breathing distress and whether this
number has an effect on the patient outcome and 2) further aim to see if regional changes in
the thoracic-abdominal movement can be recognized by the measurement method.
The data collected from this study will allow investigators to characterise chest wall
movements in children with obstructive airways disease and to examine the effect of the
treatment on this movement.
Study population
Investigators will aim to recruit:
- 35-60 children between the ages of 1 month and 12 years with acute obstructive airways
disease
- Admitted to hospital within 24 hours
Locations: Participants are children, in Evelina Children's hospital as a patient due to
obstructive airways disease
The eligible children admitted to hospital will be identified at the clinical handovers and
after obtaining the parental consent to participate in the study, the first measurements are
performed as soon as possible, however within the first 24 hours of admission. The SLP
measurements are repeated in 24 hour intervals 2-10 times depending on the duration of
hospital stay.
Clinical patient data of age, sex, ethnicity, weight and length will be collected. A member
of the clinical / research team (respiratory clinical fellow) collects structured data on the
breathing distress using a modified pulmonary index scale for children (mPIS).
Measurement of standard clinical variables, such as respiratory rate, heart rate and oxygen
saturation will be made each time the SLP readings are recorded. The measurement will be
taken on a bare skin with a white medical adhesive tape to cover any existing medical
attachments on thoracic-abdominal region (such as ECG electrodes). Alternatively,
measurements can be made if the child is wearing a close fitting white garment without any
creases (such as a babygrow).
A structured light pattern will be projected onto the chest and abdominal wall and the
movement of this pattern as the patient breathes will be recorded for 3-5 min. The total
period of testing per session should take approximately 15 minutes per person, including the
movement of the device and the positioning of the patient.
Physiological and clinical data collection at each study point:
Dates of onset of breathing difficulty, admission and discharge Oxygen treatment and
breathing support (Flow in L/min for HFNC, Fi02 %O2, CPAP settings) Current medication Need
for NG-tube Need for IV-fluids Heart Rate SaO2 Respiratory Rate
Data analysis will include the traditional time indices from tidal breathing, and the
variability of these time indices.
Appropriate statistical analyses will be identified depending on the study and distribution
of the samples (parametric vs. non-parametric). It is suspected that t-tests (one-sample to
two sample), analysis of variance (ANOVA), or Mann-Whitney-U tests will be used where
appropriate.
The investigators will also explore novel higher levels of data interpretation including
Bayesian interpretation of respiratory function, and machine learning to predict disease
diagnosis, severity and discharge.
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