CPAP Improving Mortality for Pneumonia in African Children Trial
NCT ID: NCT02484183
Last Updated: 2018-05-03
Study Results
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Basic Information
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TERMINATED
NA
646 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2015-06-23
2018-04-28
Brief Summary
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With the full support of the Malawi Ministry of Health and in collaboration with external experts from Lilongwe Medical Relief Trust and Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center investigators plan to address this critical evidence gap by conducting a randomized controlled study determining bCPAP outcomes, compared to the currently recommended standard of care endorsed by the WHO and Malawi national pneumonia guidelines, in hospitalized Malawian children with WHO-defined severe pneumonia complicated by a co-morbidity ((1) HIV-infection, (2) HIV-exposure without infection, (3) severely malnourished) or WHO pneumonia with severe hypoxemia and without a co-morbidity. The investigators hypothesize that bCPAP will reduce the mortality of Malawian children with WHO-defined severe pneumonia.
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Detailed Description
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Bubble continuous positive airway pressure (bCPAP) is non-invasive and is widely used for preterm neonatal respiratory failure in industrialised countries. Along with a flow generator, bCPAP uses a water column to deliver continuous positive pressure to a spontaneously breathing child. bCPAP is relatively inexpensive and requires little technical expertise compared with mechanical ventilation, but there is limited experience of bCPAP in resource-poor settings. Recently, small studies have explored its use in preterm neonates in Malawi. However, few studies have described its use in older infants and children, none of which included mortality as a primary endpoint and specially focused on the main drivers of poor pediatric pneumonia outcomes in southern Africa, HIV, malnutrition, and hypoxemia.
The investigators data using bCPAP in Malawian children with severe pneumonia suggest feasibility for implementation. The investigators have previously reported that using a bCPAP system derived from locally available, relatively inexpensive supplies has shown promise in the management of hospitalized HIV-infected children with pneumonia in Malawi. The investigators observational case series further delineates the outcomes of 77 Malawian children hospitalized at a tertiary referral facility with severe pneumonia who were treated with bCPAP. Nearly half were infants either infected or exposed to HIV or were severely malnourished. Although the mortality of this series of patients was 50.0%, bCPAP was initiated in this cohort only when patients were found to be failing standard treatment. The investigators estimated that more than 75% of these children would have been eligible for mechanical ventilation. In this proposed study the investigators will be initiating bCPAP earlier in the hospitalization prior to treatment failure. Unlike previous studies conducted at referral hospitals, the investigators will perform this study at the district hospital level where 80% of hospitalized child pneumonia cases are cared for in Malawi.
Although bCPAP is relatively inexpensive, scale-up in countries like Malawi with significant pneumonia burden and high HIV prevalence will require substantial resources to meet expected needs. In order to appropriately allocate precious resources and provide practical clinical guidance for healthcare providers who may use bCPAP, it is paramount to fully understand the utility of bCPAP treatment in this setting. To the investigators knowledge no bCPAP data using a control group with mortality as the primary outcome has been reporting in a similar generalized HIV epidemic African patient population 1-59 months of age. Data generated from this research will be additionally critical for formulating future studies that may include bCPAP refinements or exploration of other feasible modalities like high-flow nasal cannula or bi-level positive airway pressure. Therefore, the more rigorous methodology proposed here is warranted and supported by the Malawi Ministry of Health. If bCPAP proves an effective treatment modality for children hospitalized with WHO severe pneumonia, it is a simple technology that could be operationalized to help thousands of children with life-threatening pneumonia.
The investigators propose to address this critical evidence gap by conducting a randomized controlled study determining bCPAP outcomes, compared to the currently recommended standard of care endorsed by the WHO and Malawi Ministry of Health, in hospitalized Malawian children with WHO-defined severe pneumonia complicated by malnutrition and/or HIV-infection or -exposure, or severe hypoxemia.
RATIONALE
Quality randomized studies comparing bCPAP versus a standard-of-care control group that includes low-flow oxygen therapy and using a primary endpoint of mortality are not available in low-resource settings including high prevalence HIV countries like Malawi for children 1-59 months of age with severe pneumonia. Demonstrating a mortality benefit with bCPAP is needed to support further investment and scale up of bCPAP in the care of older Malawian children 1-59 months of age with World Health Organization (WHO) severe pneumonia complicated by HIV and/or malnutrition, or severe hypoxemia.
STUDY HYPOTHESIS AND OBJECTIVES
• Study Hypotheses
The investigators hypothesize that bCPAP, compared to standard care, will reduce the mortality of Malawian children with WHO-defined severe pneumonia complicated by a severe co-morbidity (HIV-infection or HIV-exposure and/or severe malnutrition), or severe hypoxemia without a severe co-morbidity.
• Study Objectives
The broad objective of this study is to provide scientific evidence assessing the effectiveness of treatment with bCPAP for WHO severe childhood pneumonia for children 1-59 months of age in Malawi, Africa.
* Primary Objective 1
• Determine the pneumonia mortality rate for bCPAP treatment, compared to standard of care, for children with WHO severe pneumonia.
* Primary Objective 2
• Determine the pneumonia mortality rate for bCPAP treatment, compared to standard of care, for children with WHO severe hypoxemic pneumonia without co-morbidity (i.e., no HIV infection, no HIV-exposure, no severe malnutrition).
* Primary Objective 3
• Determine the pneumonia mortality rate for bCPAP treatment, compared to standard of care, for children with WHO severe pneumonia and co-morbidity (i.e., HIV-infection or HIV-exposure and/or severe malnutrition).
* Secondary Objectives
* Determine the pneumonia day 14 treatment failure rate for bCPAP treatment, compared to standard of care, for HIV-infected children with WHO severe pneumonia.
* Determine the pneumonia day 14 treatment failure rate for bCPAP treatment, compared to standard of care, for HIV-exposed, uninfected children with WHO severe pneumonia.
* Determine the pneumonia day 14 treatment failure rate for bCPAP treatment, compared to standard of care, for severely malnourished children with WHO severe pneumonia.
* Determine the pneumonia day 14 treatment failure rate for bCPAP treatment, compared to standard of care, for severely hypoxemic children with WHO severe pneumonia.
* Determine the proportion of children alive at day 30 phone follow up.
* To investigate whether there may be differential treatment responses in certain baseline characteristics including but not limited to children with severe anemia, in those who test positive for malaria, in those with wheeze at baseline, in those with altered mental status, in those with digital auscultation-defined lung disease, and whether there is a differential treatment response by age.
* To determine whether intervention arms have equivalent rates of adverse events as control arms.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Low-flow oxygen
Low-flow oxygen supplementation if respiratory danger signs are present or if their oxygen saturation is \<90%. Respiratory danger signs include any of the following: grunting, severe chest indrawing, very fast breathing (\>70 breaths/minute if 1-11 months; \>60 breaths/minute if 12-59 months), nasal flaring, stridor in a calm child, or apnea. Low-flow oxygen given by an oxygen concentrator with a nasal cannula. Low-flow is 0.5 liters per minute (LPM) for patients 1-2 months, and 1-2 LPM for patients 2-59 months. For 2-59 month olds oxygen can be increased to a maximum of 2 LPM to maintain a 90% saturation or treat respiratory danger signs.
No interventions assigned to this group
bubble CPAP
Bubble continuous positive airway pressure (bCPAP) patients are eligible if respiratory danger signs are present or if oxygen saturation is \<90%. bCPAP will be initiated at 7 centimeters (cm) water (H20) if 1-2 months of age or 8cm H20 if 2-59 months of age using the minimum oxygen flow necessary to achieve these pressures. Gradual weaning can be attempted after 24-48 hours of treatment. All changes will be followed by 60 minutes of monitoring.
bubble continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)
This study will use an Airsep® oxygen concentrator and a Fisher \& Paykel Bubble CPAP (bCPAP) system to deliver bCPAP. The Airsep® machine is connected to the Fischer \& Paykel Bubble CPAP system and the CPAP delivers pressure and oxygen to the patient with appropriately sized masks and tubing. The Fischer \& Paykel Bubble CPAP system can deliver up to 10 centimeters (cm) water (H20) pressure. Since an oxygen concentrator is being used as the flow driver of this bubble CPAP system patients receiving CPAP will therefore also be receiving 6-8 liters per minute (LPM) of concentrated oxygen flow. Per manufacturer specifications the Airsep oxygen concentrator delivers 90-97% fractional inspired oxygen concentration at the 6-8 LPM flows required to generate 4-10 cm H20 pressure.
Interventions
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bubble continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)
This study will use an Airsep® oxygen concentrator and a Fisher \& Paykel Bubble CPAP (bCPAP) system to deliver bCPAP. The Airsep® machine is connected to the Fischer \& Paykel Bubble CPAP system and the CPAP delivers pressure and oxygen to the patient with appropriately sized masks and tubing. The Fischer \& Paykel Bubble CPAP system can deliver up to 10 centimeters (cm) water (H20) pressure. Since an oxygen concentrator is being used as the flow driver of this bubble CPAP system patients receiving CPAP will therefore also be receiving 6-8 liters per minute (LPM) of concentrated oxygen flow. Per manufacturer specifications the Airsep oxygen concentrator delivers 90-97% fractional inspired oxygen concentration at the 6-8 LPM flows required to generate 4-10 cm H20 pressure.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
1 Month
59 Months
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
OTHER
Ministry of Health and Population, Malawi
OTHER_GOV
Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati
OTHER
University of Utah
OTHER
Johns Hopkins University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Eric D McCollum, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Locations
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Salima District Hospital
Salima, , Malawi
Countries
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References
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Sessions KL, Ruegsegger L, Mvalo T, Kondowe D, Tsidya M, Hosseinipour MC, Lufesi N, Eckerle M, Smith AG, McCollum ED. Focus group discussions on low-flow oxygen and bubble CPAP treatments among mothers of young children in Malawi: a CPAP IMPACT substudy. BMJ Open. 2020 May 12;10(5):e034545. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-034545.
McCollum ED, Mvalo T, Eckerle M, Smith AG, Kondowe D, Makonokaya D, Vaidya D, Billioux V, Chalira A, Lufesi N, Mofolo I, Hosseinipour M. Bubble continuous positive airway pressure for children with high-risk conditions and severe pneumonia in Malawi: an open label, randomised, controlled trial. Lancet Respir Med. 2019 Nov;7(11):964-974. doi: 10.1016/S2213-2600(19)30243-7. Epub 2019 Sep 24.
Sessions KL, Mvalo T, Kondowe D, Makonokaya D, Hosseinipour MC, Chalira A, Lufesi N, Eckerle M, Smith AG, McCollum ED. Bubble CPAP and oxygen for child pneumonia care in Malawi: a CPAP IMPACT time motion study. BMC Health Serv Res. 2019 Jul 31;19(1):533. doi: 10.1186/s12913-019-4364-y.
Smith AG, Eckerle M, Mvalo T, Weir B, Martinson F, Chalira A, Lufesi N, Mofolo I, Hosseinipour M, McCollum ED. CPAP IMPACT: a protocol for a randomised trial of bubble continuous positive airway pressure versus standard care for high-risk children with severe pneumonia using adaptive design methods. BMJ Open Respir Res. 2017 Jun 30;4(1):e000195. doi: 10.1136/bmjresp-2017-000195. eCollection 2017.
Other Identifiers
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IRB00055734
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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