Abstract

BackgroundChild mortality due to pneumonia is a major global health problem and is associated with hypoxemia. Access to safe and continuous oxygen therapy can reduce mortality; however, low-income countries may lack the necessary resources for oxygen delivery. We have previously demonstrated proof-of-concept that solar-powered oxygen (SPO2) delivery can reliably provide medical oxygen remote settings with minimal access to electricity. This study aims to demonstrate the efficacy of SPO2 in children hospitalized with acute hypoxemic respiratory illness across Uganda.MethodsObjectives: Demonstrate efficacy of SPO2 in children hospitalized with acute hypoxemic respiratory illness. Study design: Multi-center, stepped-wedge cluster-randomized trial. Setting: Twenty health facilities across Uganda, a low-income, high-burden country for pediatric pneumonia. Site selection: Facilities with pediatric inpatient services lacking consistent O2 supply on pediatric wards. Participants: Children aged < 5 years hospitalized with hypoxemia (saturation < 92%) warranting hospital admission based on clinical judgement. Randomization methods: Random installation order generated a priori with allocation concealment. Study procedure: Patients receive standard of care within pediatric wards with or without SPO2 system installed. Outcome measures: Primary: 48-h mortality. Secondary: safety, efficacy, SPO2 system functionality, operating costs, nursing knowledge, skills, and retention for oxygen administration. Statistical analysis of primary outcome: Linear mixed effects logistic regression model with 48-h mortality (dependent variable) as a function of SPO2 treatment (before versus after installation), while adjusting for confounding effects of calendar time (fixed effect) and site (random effect). Sample size: 2400 patients across 20 health facilities, predicted to provide 80% power to detect a 35% reduction in mortality after introduction of SPO2, based on a computer simulation of > 5000 trials.DiscussionOverall, our study aims to demonstrate mortality benefit of SPO2 relative to standard (unreliable) oxygen delivery. The innovative trial design (stepped-wedge, cluster-randomized) is supported by a computer simulation. Capacity building for nursing care and oxygen therapy is a non-scientific objective of the study. If successful, SPO2 could be scaled across a variety of resource-constrained remote or rural settings in sub-Saharan Africa and beyond.Trial registrationClinicaltrials.gov, NCT03851783. Registered on 22 February 2019.

Highlights

  • Child mortality due to pneumonia is a major global health problem and is associated with hypoxemia

  • We previously demonstrated the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of Solarpowered oxygen (SPO2) through a proof-of-concept study and a randomized controlled trial (RCT), showing clinical non-inferiority compared to cylinder O2 [14,15,16]

  • This study aims to demonstrate the efficacy of SPO2 in children hospitalized with acute hypoxemic respiratory illness in Uganda

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Summary

Introduction

Child mortality due to pneumonia is a major global health problem and is associated with hypoxemia. Access to safe and continuous oxygen therapy can reduce mortality; low-income countries may lack the necessary resources for oxygen delivery. We have previously demonstrated proof-of-concept that solar-powered oxygen (SPO2) delivery can reliably provide medical oxygen remote settings with minimal access to electricity. Infectious diseases account for a large proportion of these deaths, with pneumonia being the leading cause of mortality (2.1 million deaths/ year) [1]. Most deaths occur in resource-constrained settings in Asia and Africa [2]. These countries report 2–10 times more children with pneumonia than industrialized countries [3]. In Uganda alone, child mortality is estimated to be 145,000 deaths per year [4]. Oxygen (O2) therapy is essential to support life in these patients

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