Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) in Children With Severe Pneumonia
NCT ID: NCT00455468
Last Updated: 2011-07-12
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
368 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2005-12-31
2009-04-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Severe and very severe pneumonia require hospitalization for additional supportive treatment like oro or nasopharyngeal suction, when indicated, using a suction device; oxygen therapy to hypoxic children, bronchodilators to patients with bronchospasm, bronchodilatation by nebulizer if the patients fulfill the criteria for nebulization, and fluid and nutritional management and close monitoring. In Bangladesh, the number of hospital beds are inadequate for admission of all pneumonia cases that fulfill the criteria for hospitalization. Hospitalization may also not be possible for inability of the parents to visit a hospital due to distance or, financial reason(s), despite appropriate referral. However, it is also important to provide institutional care to those children who cannot be hospitalized, at least until stabilization of their acute conditions. If such children are sent home with antibiotics, it would be important to establish an expensive, home follow up system, without which a significant proportion of them would be expected to have a fatal outcome. Provision of broad-spectrum antibiotics and appropriate supportive care during the period of stay at established day-care centres could be an effective alternative. To examine this possibility, we have recently completed a study entitled "Daycare-based management of severe pneumonia in under-5 children when hospitalization is not possible due to the lack of beds" (ICDDR,B Protocol No. 2002-036) at the Radda MCH-FP Centre, located in Mirpur Section-10, Dhaka, Bangladesh. The estimated catchment population of the Radda Clinic is about 1.5 million. The hypothesis of our recently completed study was that it would be possible to provide effective treatment and care to under-5 children with severe pneumonia at a day-care clinic set up, and if so, the need for hospitalization could be significantly reduced. The study examined if children, who required hospitalization according to WHO guidelines but were not hospitalized due to any reason, could be managed at a day-care facility (modified primary care set up), which is important to reduce morbidity and more importantly deaths among such children. We are impressed with the results, which suggested that this model of management is effective. 251 children with severe pneumonia were enrolled at the Radda Clinic from June 2003 to May 2005. The mean age was 7±7 (2-55) months, 86% were infants, 63% boys, and 91% breast-fed. On admission, history of cough was present in 99% cases, fever in 89%, rapid breathing in 67% and difficulty in breathing in 33% cases. On examination, 44% children were febrile (≥38°C), 97% children had tachypnoea with respiratory rate ≥ 50 per minute and 98% had lower chest wall in drawing. On auscultation, 93% children had vesicular breath sound and 99% bilateral rales. Most children were well nourished but 57% were hypoxic with mean oxygen saturation of (93±4)% on admission, which was corrected by oxygen therapy (98±3)%. According to WHO criteria, 80% children had severe pneumonia and 20% had very severe pneumonia. The mean duration of clinic stay was (7±2) days. 234 (93%) children completed the study successfully without any problem, 11 (4.4%) referred to hospitals (only one participant had to visit hospital at night due to deterioration of his condition, 9 were referred to hospital at the time of clinic closure i.e., at 5 pm and one participant was referred to hospital during the morning hours), and 6 (2.4%) left against medical advice (LAMA). There was no death during the period of clinic stay but only four (1.6%) deaths occurred during the 3 months follow-up period after discharge from the clinic. This study indicated that treatment of severe pneumonia in children at the day-care centre is effective and safe and thus it is comparable to the hospital care. Although this study successfully managed all children (n=251), but it was not a randomized trial and thus direct comparison of the effectiveness of management of severe pneumonia at the day-care centre, essential to recommend implementation of this management policy, is not possible. We could not plan for a RCT due to ethical reasons for our recently completed day-care pneumonia study. Now that we have data suggesting effectiveness as well as safety of the day-care based treatment and care of under-5 children with severe pneumonia, a RCT would now be possible. In the proposed study, we would identify under-5 children attending the outpatient department of the Radda Clinic and ICHSH with severe pneumonia and randomize them, in equal numbers, for management at the day-care centre (Radda Clinic) or hospital (ICHSH) subject to consent of respective parents/guardians. Children with very severe pneumonia, who needs hospitalization, would not be enrolled as they need hospital care and it would be unethical at this stage to enroll them in the proposed study. About 3000 children with a clinical diagnosis of pneumonia visit the clinic each year, and we estimate that about 200 of them will have severe pneumonia requiring hospitalization - the patient population of our study. We hope to enroll requisite 368 (184/site) children with severe pneumonia during 2-year study period.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Interventions
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Day-care treatment vs. hospital care
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Sex: Both boys and girls
* Severe pneumonia according to WHO criteria (Severe pneumonia is defined as cough or difficult breathing with lower chest wall in drawing with or without fast breathing which is defined as the respiratory rate ≥ 50 breaths per minute for children aged 2-11 months and ≥ 40 breaths per minute for children aged 12-59 months)
* Attend the Radda Clinic and ICHSH between 8:00 am to 4:00 pm (Sunday through Saturday)
* Written informed consent by respective parents/guardians
Exclusion Criteria
* Nosocomial pneumonia
* History of taking antibiotics for pneumonia within 48 hour prior to enrollment
* Chronic illnesses like tuberculosis, cystic fibrosis
* Congenital deformities/anomalies e.g. Down's Syndrome, congenital heart disease
* Immunodeficiency
* Trauma/burn
* Bronchiolitis
* Bronchial asthma
* Lives far away from the Radda Clinic and ICHSH (outside 5 km radius from the respective study site)
* Parents/guardians not consenting for inclusion of their children in the study
2 Months
59 Months
ALL
No
Sponsors
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International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh
OTHER
Responsible Party
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International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh
Principal Investigators
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Hasan Ashraf, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
ICDDR,B: Centre for Health and Population Research
Locations
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ICDDR,B
Dhaka, , Bangladesh
Countries
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References
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Ashraf H, Alam NH, Chisti MJ, Salam MA, Ahmed T, Gyr N. Observational follow-up study following two cohorts of children with severe pneumonia after discharge from day care clinic/hospital in Dhaka, Bangladesh. BMJ Open. 2012 Jul 27;2(4):e000961. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2012-000961. Print 2012.
Ashraf H, Mahmud R, Alam NH, Jahan SA, Kamal SM, Haque F, Salam MA, Gyr N. Randomized controlled trial of day care versus hospital care of severe pneumonia in Bangladesh. Pediatrics. 2010 Oct;126(4):e807-15. doi: 10.1542/peds.2009-3631. Epub 2010 Sep 20.
Other Identifiers
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2005-037
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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