Pneumonia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Use of Bubble CPAP Compared to Nasal Prong Oxygen or Humidified High Flow in Children Under Five With Severe Pneumonia and Hypoxaemia: a Randomized Trial
Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) is a common form of support for patients admitted
to Intensive Care Units (ICUs) of industrialized countries with respiratory distress (1).
Nasal CPAP (NCPAP) is effective in correcting hypoxemia and contributes to reducing the
number of children requiring endo-tracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation (2). CPAP
is most frequently delivered to neonates using conventional mechanical ventilators, and thus
there is minimal or no cost saving. There are other ways of delivering CPAP, such as
Bubble-CPAP, which requires a source of gas flow (typically 6-8 L/ minute in a neonate), an
air-oxygen blender, a humidifier and a T-piece.(3). The expiratory arm is inserted in a
bottle of water and the level of CPAP delivered is equivalent to the length of the
expiratory tubing that remains under water. Robust equipment is now available at a fraction
of the cost of mechanical ventilators. Bubble-CPAP has potential advantages over the
mechanical ventilation, such as lower cost, ease of application by nursing staff, lower risk
of complications, and has been proposed as an inexpensive method of delivering CPAP in
developing countries (3).
High flow air/oxygen mix is useful in reducing the indication of mechanical ventilation (4);
however, there is a lack of randomized studies comparing it with bubble CPAP or with
standard flow O2 supplementation by nasal prongs. High flow air/oxygen mix uses flows of 2
litre per kg per minute of blended air/oxygen mix, usually with a low fraction of inspired
oxygen (say 25-40%). It is easy to apply, but requires additional equipment to standard
oxygen therapy, and closer monitoring. "High flow" delivers uncertain levels of CPAP, so it
is not clearly superior to bubble-CPAP, and there have been no controlled comparative trials
of these two techniques.
Pneumonia and malnutrition are two of the most common co-morbidities in children in
developing countries (5). In hospitals in resource-poor settings, children with severe
malnutrition and pneumonia often present with respiratory distress with or without severe
hypoxaemia and impending respiratory failure (6). They initially receive O2 supplementation
through nasal prong or face mask. Support from bubble CPAP might help to effectively treat
hypoxaemia, improve respiratory function, avoid the need for mechanical ventilation and its
complications, and reduce mortality.
Almost half of the patients admitted in the intensive care unit of the Dhaka hospital of
ICDDR,B present with hypoxaemia, many with impending respiratory failure. Children with
pneumonia also invariably have severe malnutrition with or without diarrhoea (Chisti MJ,
MMed thesis, unpublished data). They often need mechanical ventilation, with attendant
costs, complications and high mortality rates. However, no published data are available
about the use of bubble-CPAP in children with pneumonia and malnutrition and there have been
no controlled trials of CPAP in developing countries.
The Hypothesis is:
In children with severe pneumonia and hypoxaemia the probability of treatment failure (see
definition below) will be significantly lower when respiratory support is initially provided
by bubble-CPAP or high-flow, humidified air/O2 mix by nasal prongs, compared to standard
oxygen flow.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 975 |
Est. completion date | June 2015 |
Est. primary completion date | June 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | N/A to 5 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: Children of either sex, aged 0-4 years, with severe/very severe pneumonia (per WHO guidelines) and hypoxaemia (SpO2 < 90%) will be included in our study in the ARI Unit of the Longer Stay Ward (LSW), High Dependency Unit HDU, and ICU unit of Dhaka Hospital of ICDDR,B. Exclusion Criteria: Children with uncorrected cyanotic CHD, hypercapnoea (PCO2 > 65 mm of Hg), status asthmaticus and upper-airway obstruction, and those for whom inform consent can't be secured from their parents/ care-givers. Children with features (any two of three criteria given below) of "treatment failure" on admission (before enrollment into the study) will also be excluded from the study. Arterial blood gas analysis will be performed to check the exclusion criteria |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Bangladesh | Dhaka Hospital, ICDDR,B | Dhaka |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh | AusAID, University of Melbourne |
Bangladesh,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Treatment failure | Severe hypoxaemia (SpO2<85%) after being on one of the study arm treatments for >1 hour Clinical signs of exhaustion, including active contraction of respiratory muscles with paradoxical abdominal and thoracic motion, gasping, severe chest wall in-drawing PCO2 >80mm Hg and pH<7.2 on capillary blood gas OR | 24 months | Yes |
Secondary | Mortality rate | Mortality rate calculated at hospital discharge Rate of need for mechanical ventilation Rates of nosocomial infections Rates of multi-organ failure at 7 days Length of hospital stay Rate of absconding Bacterial aetiology Rates of isolation of TB |
24 months | Yes |
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