Literature DB >> 19330771

A clinical tool to predict failed response to therapy in children with severe pneumonia.

Manju Mamtani1, Archana Patel, Patricia L Hibberd, Tran Anh Tuan, Prakash Jeena, Noel Chisaka, Mumtaz Hassan, Irene Maulen Radovan, Donald M Thea, Shamim Qazi, Hemant Kulkarni.   

Abstract

Severe pneumonia in children under 5 years of age continues to be an important clinical entity with treatment failure rates as high as 20%. Where severe pneumonias are common, predictive tools for treatment failure like chest radiography and pulse oximetry are not available or affordable. Thus, there is a need for development of simple, accurate and inexpensive clinical tools for prediction of treatment failure. Using clinical, chest radiographic and pulse oximetry data from 1702 children recruited in the Amoxicillin Penicillin Pneumonia International Study (APPIS) trial we developed and validated a simple clinical tool. For development, a randomly derived development sample (n = 889) was used. The tool which was based on the results of multivariate logistic regression models was validated on a separate sample of 813 children. The derived clinical tool in its final form contained three clinical predictors: age of child, excess age-specific respiratory rate at baseline and at 24 hr of hospitalization. This tool had a 70% and 66% predictive accuracy in the development and validation samples, respectively. The tool is presented as an easy-to-use nomogram. It is possible to predict the likelihood of treatment failure in children with severe pneumonia based on clinical features that are simple and inexpensive to measure. (c) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19330771     DOI: 10.1002/ppul.21014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Pulmonol        ISSN: 1099-0496


  9 in total

1.  The management of community-acquired pneumonia in infants and children older than 3 months of age: clinical practice guidelines by the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society and the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

Authors:  John S Bradley; Carrie L Byington; Samir S Shah; Brian Alverson; Edward R Carter; Christopher Harrison; Sheldon L Kaplan; Sharon E Mace; George H McCracken; Matthew R Moore; Shawn D St Peter; Jana A Stockwell; Jack T Swanson
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2011-08-31       Impact factor: 9.079

Review 2.  Teaching Pediatric Life Support in Limited-Resource Settings: Contextualized Management Guidelines.

Authors:  Mark E Ralston; Allan de Caen
Journal:  J Pediatr Intensive Care       Date:  2016-06-29

3.  Pneumonia Risk Stratification Scores for Children in Low-Resource Settings: A Systematic Literature Review.

Authors:  Katrina V Deardorff; Eric D McCollum; Amy Sarah Ginsburg
Journal:  Pediatr Infect Dis J       Date:  2018-08       Impact factor: 2.129

4.  Can We Predict Oral Antibiotic Treatment Failure in Children with Fast-Breathing Pneumonia Managed at the Community Level? A Prospective Cohort Study in Malawi.

Authors:  Carina King; Eric D McCollum; Limangeni Mankhambo; Tim Colbourn; James Beard; Debbie C Hay Burgess; Anthony Costello; Rasa Izadnegahdar; Raza Izadnegahdar; Norman Lufesi; Gibson Masache; Charles Mwansambo; Bejoy Nambiar; Eric Johnson; Robert Platt; David Mukanga
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-08-27       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Development of a prognostic risk score to aid antibiotic decision-making for children aged 2-59 months with World Health Organization fast breathing pneumonia in Malawi: An Innovative Treatments in Pneumonia (ITIP) secondary analysis.

Authors:  Eric D McCollum; Siobhan P Brown; Evangelyn Nkwopara; Tisungane Mvalo; Susanne May; Amy Sarah Ginsburg
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-06-20       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Predicting severe pneumonia in the emergency department: a global study of the Pediatric Emergency Research Networks (PERN)-study protocol.

Authors:  Todd Adam Florin; Daniel Joseph Tancredi; Lilliam Ambroggio; Franz E Babl; Stuart R Dalziel; Michelle Eckerle; Santiago Mintegi; Mark Neuman; Amy C Plint; Nathan Kuppermann
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2020-12-02       Impact factor: 2.692

7.  Field testing two existing, standardized respiratory severity scores (LIBSS and ReSViNET) in infants presenting with acute respiratory illness to tertiary hospitals in Rwanda - a validation and inter-rater reliability study.

Authors:  Boniface Hakizimana; Edgar Kalimba; Augustin Ndatinya; Gemma Saint; Clare van Miert; Peter Thomas Cartledge
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-11-04       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Abnormal expression and clinical value analysis of long noncoding RNA cancer susceptibility candidate 2 in children with severe pneumonia complicated with respiratory failure.

Authors:  Jie Ni; Junfei Lu; Ding Lu
Journal:  Clin Respir J       Date:  2022-06-03       Impact factor: 1.761

Review 9.  Predictors of treatment failure for non-severe childhood pneumonia in developing countries--systematic literature review and expert survey--the first step towards a community focused mHealth risk-assessment tool?

Authors:  Eric D McCollum; Carina King; Robert Hollowell; Janet Zhou; Tim Colbourn; Bejoy Nambiar; David Mukanga; Deborah C Hay Burgess
Journal:  BMC Pediatr       Date:  2015-07-09       Impact factor: 2.125

  9 in total

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