Abstract

SummaryBackgroundPneumonia is the leading cause of death among children globally. Most pneumonia deaths in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) occur among children with HIV infection or exposure, severe malnutrition, or hypoxaemia despite antibiotics and oxygen. Non-invasive bubble continuous positive airway pressure (bCPAP) is considered a safe ventilation modality that might improve child pneumonia survival. bCPAP outcomes for high-risk African children with severe pneumonia are unknown. Since most child pneumonia hospitalisations in Africa occur in non-tertiary district hospitals without daily physician oversight, we aimed to examine whether bCPAP improves severe pneumonia mortality in such settings.MethodsThis open-label, randomised, controlled trial was done in the general paediatric ward of Salima District Hospital, Malawi. We enrolled children aged 1–59 months old with WHO-defined severe pneumonia and either HIV infection or exposure, severe malnutrition, or an oxygen saturation of less than 90%. Children were randomly assigned 1:1 to low-flow nasal cannula oxygen or nasal bCPAP. Non-physicians administered care; the primary outcome was hospital survival. Primary analyses were by intention-to-treat and interim and adverse events analyses per protocol. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02484183, and is closed.FindingsWe screened 1712 children for eligibility between June 23, 2015, and March 21, 2018. The data safety and monitoring board stopped the trial for futility after 644 of the intended 900 participants were enrolled. 323 children were randomly assigned to oxygen and 321 to bCPAP. 35 (11%) of 323 children who received oxygen died in hospital, as did 53 (17%) of 321 who received bCPAP (relative risk 1·52; 95% CI 1·02–2·27; p=0·036). 13 oxygen and 17 bCPAP patients lacked hospital outcomes and were considered lost to follow-up. Suspected adverse events related to treatment occurred in 11 (3%) of 321 children receiving bCPAP and 1 (<1%) of 323 children receiving oxygen. Four bCPAP and one oxygen group deaths were classified as probable aspiration episodes, one bCPAP death as probable pneumothorax, and six non-death bCPAP events included skin breakdown around the nares.InterpretationbCPAP treatment in a paediatric ward without daily physician supervision did not reduce hospital mortality among high-risk Malawian children with severe pneumonia, compared with oxygen. The use of bCPAP within certain patient populations and non-intensive care settings might carry risk that was not previously recognised. bCPAP in LMICs needs further evaluation before wider implementation for child pneumonia care.FundingBill & Melinda Gates Foundation, International AIDS Society, Health Empowering Humanity.

Highlights

  • Pneumonia is the leading infectious cause of death among children aged 1–59 months worldwide.[1]

  • We screened children for eligibility between June 23, 2015, and March 21, 2018; children with severe hypoxaemia who were without HIV or severe malnutrition were included after May, 2016. 644 children had a co-existing high-risk condition and were randomly assigned with 323 allocated to low-flow oxygen and 321 to bubble continuous positive airway pressure (bCPAP). 17 bCPAP and 13 oxygen patients lacked hospital outcomes and were considered lost to follow-up

  • Four low-flow oxygen children and two bCPAP children were referred to a tertiary hospital and nine low-flow oxygen children and 15 bCPAP children withdrew from the trial

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Summary

Introduction

Pneumonia is the leading infectious cause of death among children aged 1–59 months worldwide.[1] According to WHO criteria, pneumonia is a syndrome characterised by non-specific respiratory signs and symptoms, many of which occur in children without primary respiratory disease.[2] Along with improved vaccine access, treatment according to WHO pneumonia guidelines by healthcare providers in lowincome and middle-income countries (LMICs) over the past 20 years has led to reduced child pneumonia mortality globally.[3] most pneumonia deaths among children aged 1–59 months in LMICs are concentrated in those with HIV infection or exposure, severe malnutrition, or hypoxaemia (peripheral oxygen saturation [SpO2]

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