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Published in: Intensive Care Medicine 5/2021

Open Access 01-05-2021 | Hypoxemia | Original

Randomised controlled trial of oxygen therapy and high-flow nasal therapy in African children with pneumonia

Authors: K. Maitland, S. Kiguli, P. Olupot-Olupot, M. Hamaluba, K. Thomas, F. Alaroker, R. O. Opoka, A. Tagoola, V. Bandika, A. Mpoya, H. Mnjella, E. Nabawanuka, W. Okiror, M. Nakuya, D. Aromut, C. Engoru, E. Oguda, T. N. Williams, J. F. Fraser, D. A. Harrison, K Rowan, the COAST trial group

Published in: Intensive Care Medicine | Issue 5/2021

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Abstract

Purpose

The life-saving role of oxygen therapy in African children with severe pneumonia is not yet established.

Methods

The open-label fractional-factorial COAST trial randomised eligible Ugandan and Kenyan children aged > 28 days with severe pneumonia and severe hypoxaemia stratum (SpO2 < 80%) to high-flow nasal therapy (HFNT) or low-flow oxygen (LFO: standard care) and hypoxaemia stratum (SpO2 80–91%) to HFNT or LFO (liberal strategies) or permissive hypoxaemia (ratio 1:1:2). Children with cyanotic heart disease, chronic lung disease or > 3 h receipt of oxygen were excluded. The primary endpoint was 48 h mortality; secondary endpoints included mortality or neurocognitive sequelae at 28 days.

Results

The trial was stopped early after enrolling 1852/4200 children, including 388 in the severe hypoxaemia stratum (median 7 months; median SpO2 75%) randomised to HFNT (n = 194) or LFO (n = 194) and 1454 in the hypoxaemia stratum (median 9 months; median SpO2 88%) randomised to HFNT (n = 363) vs LFO (n = 364) vs permissive hypoxaemia (n = 727). Per-protocol 15% of patients in the permissive hypoxaemia group received oxygen (when SpO2 < 80%). In the severe hypoxaemia stratum, 48-h mortality was 9.3% for HFNT vs. 13.4% for LFO groups. In the hypoxaemia stratum, 48-h mortality was 1.1% for HFNT vs. 2.5% LFO and 1.4% for permissive hypoxaemia. In the hypoxaemia stratum, adjusted odds ratio for 48-h mortality in liberal vs permissive comparison was 1.16 (0.49–2.74; p = 0.73); HFNT vs LFO comparison was 0.60 (0.33–1.06; p = 0.08). Strata-specific 28 day mortality rates were, respectively: 18.6, 23.4 and 3.3, 4.1, 3.9%. Neurocognitive sequelae were rare.

Conclusions

Respiratory support with HFNT showing potential benefit should prompt further trials.
Appendix
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Metadata
Title
Randomised controlled trial of oxygen therapy and high-flow nasal therapy in African children with pneumonia
Authors
K. Maitland
S. Kiguli
P. Olupot-Olupot
M. Hamaluba
K. Thomas
F. Alaroker
R. O. Opoka
A. Tagoola
V. Bandika
A. Mpoya
H. Mnjella
E. Nabawanuka
W. Okiror
M. Nakuya
D. Aromut
C. Engoru
E. Oguda
T. N. Williams
J. F. Fraser
D. A. Harrison
K Rowan
the COAST trial group
Publication date
01-05-2021
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Intensive Care Medicine / Issue 5/2021
Print ISSN: 0342-4642
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1238
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-021-06385-3

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