| Literature DB >> 28575356 |
Andrea N DeLuca1,2, Laura L Hammitt1,3, Julia Kim4, Melissa M Higdon1, Henry C Baggett5,6, W Abdullah Brooks7,8, Stephen R C Howie9,10,11, Maria Deloria Knoll1, Karen L Kotloff12, Orin S Levine1,13, Shabir A Madhi14,15, David R Murdoch16,17, J Anthony G Scott3,18, Donald M Thea19, Tussanee Amornintapichet20, Juliet O Awori3, Somchai Chuananon21, Amanda J Driscoll1, Bernard E Ebruke9, Lokman Hossain8, Yasmin Jahan8, E Wangeci Kagucia1, Sidi Kazungu3, David P Moore14,15,22, Azwifarwi Mudau14,15, Lawrence Mwananyanda19,23, Daniel E Park1,24, Christine Prosperi1, Phil Seidenberg19,25, Mamadou Sylla26, Milagritos D Tapia12, Syed M A Zaman9,27, Katherine L O'Brien1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND.: Induced sputum (IS) may provide diagnostic information about the etiology of pneumonia. The safety of this procedure across a heterogeneous population with severe pneumonia in low- and middle-income countries has not been described. METHODS.: IS specimens were obtained as part a 7-country study of the etiology of severe and very severe pneumonia in hospitalized children <5 years of age. Rigorous clinical monitoring was done before, during, and after the procedure to record oxygen requirement, oxygen saturation, respiratory rate, consciousness level, and other evidence of clinical deterioration. Criteria for IS contraindications were predefined and serious adverse events (SAEs) were reported to ethics committees and a central safety monitor. RESULTS.: A total of 4653 IS procedures were done among 3802 children. Thirteen SAEs were reported in relation to collection of IS, or 0.34% of children with at least 1 IS specimen collected (95% confidence interval, 0.15%-0.53%). A drop in oxygen saturation that required supplemental oxygen was the most common SAE. One child died after feeding was reinitiated 2 hours after undergoing sputum induction; this death was categorized as "possibly related" to the procedure. CONCLUSIONS.: The overall frequency of SAEs was very low, and the nature of most SAEs was manageable, demonstrating a low-risk safety profile for IS collection even among severely ill children in low-income-country settings. Healthcare providers should monitor oxygen saturation and requirements during and after IS collection, and assess patients prior to reinitiating feeding after the IS procedure, to ensure patient safety.Entities:
Keywords: PERCH; induced sputum; safety.; severe pneumonia; very severe pneumonia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28575356 PMCID: PMC5447836 DOI: 10.1093/cid/cix078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Serious Adverse Events Reported After Initiating First Induced Sputum Procedurea in Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health (PERCH) Study Cases
| Serious Adverse Event | No. | Risk of Event per Procedure |
|---|---|---|
| Total | 13 | 0.34 |
| Drop in oxygen saturation | 9 | 0.23 |
| New requirement or increased need for bronchodilator | 1 | 0.03 |
| New onset of unconsciousness or prostration | 1 | 0.03 |
| Death within 4 h of initiating the IS procedure (for any reason) | 2 | 0.05 |
| Category of relatedness to IS procedure | ||
| Definitely | 4 | 0.10 |
| Probably | 1 | 0.03 |
| Possibly | 5 | 0.13 |
| Probably not | 3 | 0.08 |
Abbreviation: IS, induced sputum.
aNo serious adverse events occurred after the second IS. Table restricted to first induced sputum procedures to avoid double counting subset of children who underwent a second IS procedure in denominator.
Description of Serious Adverse Events Occurring Within 4 Hours of Initiating the Induced Sputum Procedure
| Pneumonia Severity | Age | Sex | Adverse Event | Relatedness | Details | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Very severe | 6 mo | F | Drop in oxygen saturation <92% requiring increased oxygen | Definitely | Approximately 10 min into the procedure, the child’s oxygen saturation dropped below 92% for >10 min. The child’s clinical status stabilized to stable within an hour, and the oxygen saturation stabilized at 95%–98% on room air. | Resolved |
| Very severe | 2 mo | M | New requirement for bronchodilator | Definitely | During the procedure, child required increased bronchodilator nebulization to stabilize his oxygen saturation levels, which had been steady on supplemental oxygen prior to the procedure. Bronchodilators were administered for 15 min, and by 1 h postprocedure the child was stable, without continuing need for bronchodilators. | Resolved |
| Very severe | 23 mo | M | Drop in oxygen saturation <92% requiring increased oxygen | Definitely | Child with cyanotic heart disease experienced a drop in measured oxygen saturation from 96% on room air to 74% while receiving nebulized hypertonic saline. Oxygen was administered, and the child was clinically stable at 4 h postprocedure. Study clinicians and the local safety monitor determined that the preprocedure oxygen saturation levels may have been noted incorrectly before initiating the IS procedure. | Diagnosis of cyanotic heart disease |
| Severe | 3 mo | F | Drop in oxygen saturation <92% requiring increased oxygen | Definitely | Child experienced an increased oxygen requirement between 30 min and 2 h postprocedure, and a ward pediatrician recommended a switch from nasal prong O2 at 2 L/min to a polymask at 10 L/min based on the advice of the attending physician. By 8 h postprocedure, the child had been weaned back to nasal prong oxygen and was clinically stable. | Resolved |
| Very severe | 3 mo | M | Drop in oxygen saturation <92% requiring increased oxygen | Possibly | A child on supplemental oxygen who had stable clinical signs for 2 hours postprocedure was taken off the ward by a guardian. When study staff located the child for the 4-h postprocedure clinical monitoring, he was found to have an oxygen saturation of 80%. Supplemental oxygen was delivered; however, the child’s guardian continued to remove the oxygen, and the child did not stabilize until 48 h after the procedure, as oxygen delivery was continuously disrupted. | Resolved |
| Severe | 1 mo | F | Drop in oxygen saturation <92% requiring increased oxygen | Possibly | 30 min after the IS procedure, the child’s oxygen saturation fell to 90% for >10 min. Supplemental oxygen was administered; the child’s clinical status resolved by 4 h post-IS with an oxygen saturation of 94%–96% on room air. | Resolved |
| Severe | 8 mo | M | Drop in oxygen saturation <92% requiring increased oxygen | Possibly | Child’s oxygen saturation fell to 95% from 100% and work of breathing increased at 30 min post-IS. An attending physician felt the child required intubation at 1–2 h post-IS for increased work of breathing. At 4 h post-IS, the child had a respiratory rate of 62/min and an oxygen saturation of 98%. The child was extubated 7 d later. | Resolved |
| Severe | 3 mo | M | Drop in oxygen saturation <92% requiring increased oxygen | Possibly | Oxygen saturation dropped to 67% from 95% on 2 L/min nasal prong oxygen in a child with extensive multilobar pneumonia during the NP aspiration part of the IS procedure. The procedure was stopped and the oxygen saturation normalized with continued nasal prong oxygen at 2 L/min. At 4 h post-IS, the child had a respiratory rate of 86/min and 100% oxygen saturation on 12 L/min polymask oxygen. Over the ensuing several hours the child’s respiratory status deteriorated, with increasing work of breathing and oxygen requirement leading to intubation 12 h following the procedure. The child self-extubated 6 d later. | Resolved |
| Severe | 5 mo | F | Death | Possibly | IS collected without event in a child with 98% oxygen saturation on room air. Postprocedure respiratory rate was 78 breaths/min. During breastfeeding 1 h post-IS, the child developed severe respiratory distress and died despite resuscitation efforts 2 h after the procedure. The cause of death was assessed as a likely aspiration event. | Death |
| Severe | 30 mo | M | Drop in oxygen saturation <92% requiring increased oxygen | Probably | During the nebulization with hypertonic saline, the child’s oxygen saturation fell to 88%–92%. Low flow oxygen was started and administered for 50 min postprocedure, without attempting to wean the child off oxygen. The child’s oxygen saturation was >92% at 2 and 4 h postprocedure on room air. | Resolved |
| Very severe | 3 mo | M | Drop in oxygen saturation <92% requiring increased oxygen | Probably not | Child experienced a seizure 1 h after the IS procedure. The child had a seizure in the 24 h prior to IS collection, which is a contraindication for the procedure. However, this was not communicated to the PERCH physician who performed the IS procedure. The procedure was stopped during the NP suctioning because of transient desaturation to 80% with O2 saturation returning to 95% within 60 sec of catheter withdrawal. An hour after the IS procedure was started, the child experienced another seizure. At 4 h after the IS procedure, the child was alert with an oxygen saturation of 99% on 2 L/min nasal prong oxygen. | Resolved |
| Very severe | 16 mo | F | Death | Probably not | Child with very severe pneumonia and early signs of malnutrition was stable more than 2 h after specimen collection. Child developed dyspnea while being fed milk by her father and could not be resuscitated. The cause of death was assessed as a likely aspiration event. | Death |
| Very severe | 11 mo | F | New onset of unconsciousness or prostration | Probably not/ unlikely | Child was stable for 1 h after the IS procedure. 90 min after the procedure, the child developed respiratory distress immediately following feeding. Two contraindications (history of seizure and inability to protect airways) should have been noted for this case. By 4 h post-IS, the child had oxygen saturation of 85% on room air, which improved to 96% on supplemental oxygen. | Resolved |
Abbreviations: IS, induced sputum; NP, nasopharyngeal; O2, oxygen; PERCH, Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health.
Characteristics of Cases With and Without a Serious Adverse Eventa
| Characteristics | Cases without an SAE (n = 3785b) | Cases with an SAE |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Site | |||||
| Kenya | 591 | 15.6 | 3 | 23.1 | .99 |
| The Gambia | 592 | 15.6 | 2 | 15.4 | |
| Mali | 544 | 14.4 | 0 | 0.0 | |
| Zambia | 516 | 13.6 | 2 | 15.4 | |
| South Africa | 836 | 22.1 | 5 | 38.5 | |
| Thailand | 189 | 5.0 | 1 | 7.7 | |
| Bangladesh | 517 | 13.7 | 0 | 0.0 | |
| Age | |||||
| 1–5 mo | 1539 | 40.7 | 7 | 53.8 | .79 |
| 6–11 mo | 858 | 22.7 | 3 | 23.1 | |
| 12–23 mo | 859 | 22.7 | 2 | 15.4 | |
| 24–59 mo | 529 | 14.0 | 1 | 7.7 | |
| Female | 1587 | 41.9 | 7 | 53.8 | .41 |
| Severe malnutritiond | 504 | 13.4 | 3 | 23.1 | .36 |
| Bronchiolitise | 740 | 19.8 | 3 | 23.1 | .92 |
| HIV positivef | 203 | 5.4 | 2 | 15.4 | .24 |
| HIV exposedg | 614 | 17.9 | 6 | 46.2 | .06 |
| Very severe pneumonia | 1081 | 28.6 | 7 | 50.0 | .06 |
| Abnormal CXRh | 1741 | 53.0 | 9 | 75.0 | .20 |
Data are presented as No. (%).
Abbreviations: CXR, chest radiograph; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; SAE, serious adverse event; SD, standard deviation; WHO, World Health Organization.
aAmong children who underwent an induced sputum procedure.
bThis table does not include data for 4 children who had an SAE related to lung aspirates.
cCalculated from logistic regression (outcome = SAE) adjusted for site and age (site is adjusted for age only and age is adjusted for site only).
dWHO weight-for-age z score < –3 SDs.
eBronchiolitis reported as admission or discharge diagnoses or concurrent condition.
fHIV positive: detectable viral load or HIV seropositive if >12 months old.
gHIV exposed: HIV positive, positive ELISA results (if < 12 months), or positive maternal history (maternal history must be confirmed by maternal serology for seronegative infants <7 months).
hAbnormal chest radiograph defined as presence of consolidation and/or other infiltrate.
Clinical Measurements in Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health (PERCH) Study Cases Before and After First Induced Sputum Procedure (N = 3736a)
| Measurement | Immediately Before | Immediately After | 30 Minutes After | 2 Hours After | 4 Hours After |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oxygen flow, L/minb | |||||
| No. | 1091 | 1048 | 1084 | 1044 | 1019 |
| Median (IQR) | 2.0 (2.0–2.0) | 2.0 (2.0–2.0) | 2.0 (2.0–2.0) | 2.0 (2.0–2.0) | 2.0 (2.0–2.0) |
| Median change from baseline (IQR) | NA | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| No. (%) with increase of >1 L/min from baseline | NA | 5 (0.5) | 5 (0.5) | 8 (0.7) | 8 (0.7) |
| Oxygen saturation, % | |||||
| No. | 3349 | 3340 | 3347 | 3336 | 3324 |
| Median (IQR) | 97 (95–99) | 98 (96–99) | 97 (95–99) | 97 (96–99) | 98 (96–99) |
| Median change from baseline (IQR) | NA | 0 (–1 to 2) | 0 (–1 to 1) | 0 (–1 to 1) | 0 (–1 to 2) |
| No. (%) on supplemental oxygenc | 1091 (32.6) | 1048 (31.4) | 1084 (32.4) | 1044 (31.3) | 1017 (30.6) |
| Respiratory rate, breaths/min | |||||
| No. | 3513 | 3525 | 3546 | 3542 | 3534 |
| Median (IQR) | 52 (44–60) | 54 (46–62) | 51 (42–60) | 50 (42–58) | 48 (40–56) |
| Median change from baseline (IQR) | NA | 2 (–2 to 5) | 0 (–4 to 3) | –2 (–6 to 2) | –2 (–8 to 1) |
| No. (%) tachypneicd | 2357 (67.1) | 2561 (72.7) | 2308 (65.1) | 2117 (59.8) | 1986 (56.2) |
| Consciousness level (AVPU scale)e | |||||
| No. | 3538 | 3528 | 3532 | 3524 | 3520 |
| No. (%) V, P, or U | 10 (0.3) | 10 (0.3) | 12 (0.3) | 9 (0.3) | 7 (0.2) |
| No. (%) with any decrease from baseline | NA | 5 (0.1) | 7 (0.2) | 4 (0.1) | 4 (0.1) |
Abbreviations: AVPU, alert, voice, pain, unresponsive; IQR, interquartile range; NA, not applicable (baseline measurement).
aA total of 66 children had no clinical monitoring data at any time point and have been excluded from this table.
bAmong children on supplemental oxygen at respective monitoring time points.
cTwo children on oxygen at 4 hours postprocedure did not have oxygen saturation data and are not included in the “n” of 1017.
dTachypneic: ≥60 breaths per minute (bpm) for children <2 months, ≥50 bpm for children 2–11 months, ≥40 bpm for children 12–59 months.
eAVPU = alert, voice, pain, unresponsive scale to assess consciousness level. V, P, and U means not alert (A), but responsive to voice (V) or pain (P), or unresponsive (U). Numbers and percentages for AVPU exclude children whose conscious level was unknown or who were pharmacologically sedated.
Characteristics of Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health (PERCH) Study Cases With Induced Sputum Collection
| Characteristic | Children With | Children With | All Children | All IS Specimens |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | ||||
| 1 mo to <6 mo | 1139 (38.6) | 410 (48.2) | 1549 (40.7) | 1959 (42.1) |
| 6–11 mo | 649 (22.0) | 212 (24.9) | 861 (22.6) | 1073 (23.1) |
| 12–23 mo | 705 (23.9) | 156 (18.3) | 861 (22.6) | 1017 (21.9) |
| 24–59 mo | 458 (15.5) | 73 (8.6) | 531 (14.0) | 604 (13.0) |
| Severity | ||||
| Severe | 2114 (71.6) | 599 (70.4) | 2713 (71.4) | 3312 (71.2) |
| Very severe | 837 (28.4) | 252 (29.6) | 1089 (28.6) | 1341 (28.8) |
| Sex | ||||
| Female | 1210 (41.0) | 385 (45.2) | 1595 (42.0) | 1980 (42.6) |
| Male | 1741 (59.0) | 466 (54.8) | 2207 (58.0) | 2673 (57.4) |
| HIV statusb | ||||
| Positive | 112 (3.8) | 93 (10.9) | 205 (5.4) | 298 (6.4) |
| Negative | 2527 (85.6) | 751 (88.2) | 3278 (86.2) | 4029 (86.6) |
| Unknown | 312 (10.6) | 7 (0.8) | 319 (8.4) | 326 (7.0) |
| HIV exposurec | ||||
| Exposed | 267 (9.0) | 353 (41.5) | 620 (16.3) | 973 (20.9) |
| Unexposed | 2370 (80.3) | 460 (54.1) | 2830 (74.4) | 3290 (70.7) |
| Unknown | 314 (10.6) | 38 (4.5) | 352 (9.3) | 390 (8.4) |
| Receiving supplemental oxygen | ||||
| At admission | 500 (16.9) | 702 (82.5)a | 1202 (31.6) | 1904 (40.9) |
| Everd | 808 (27.4) | 767 (90.1) | 1576 (41.4) | 2343 (50.4) |
| Immediately prior to IS | 524 (17.8) | 577 (67.8)e | 1101 (29.0) | 1580 (34.0) |
| Country/study site | ||||
| Kilifi, Kenya | 550 (18.6) | 44 (5.2) | 594 (15.6) | 638 (13.7) |
| Basse, The Gambia | 588 (19.9) | 8 (0.9) | 596 (15.7) | 604 (13.0) |
| Bamako, Mali | 544 (18.4) | 0 (0.0) | 544 (14.3) | 544 (11.7) |
| Lusaka, Zambia | 517 (17.5) | 1 (0.1) | 518 (13.6) | 519 (11.2) |
| Soweto, South Africa | 56 (1.9) | 785 (92.2) | 841 (22.1) | 1626 (34.9) |
| Nakhon Phanom and Sa Kaeo, Thailand | 190 (6.4) | 1 (0.1) | 191 (5.0) | 192 (4.1) |
| Dhaka and Matlab, Bangladesh | 506 (17.2) | 12 (1.4) | 518 (13.6) | 530 (11.4) |
Data are presented as No. (%).
Abbreviations: HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; IS, induced sputum.
aAmong children with >1 IS, 92% were from the South African site where it was standard of care to place children with pneumonia on oxygen.
bHIV negative: negative polymerase chain reaction or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) results, negative maternal test results at enrollment, or absence of evidence to indicate the child is positive in settings with limited HIV transmission (Bangladesh); HIV positive: detectable viral load or HIV seropositive if >12 months old; HIV-unknown: insufficient evidence to define HIV status.
cHIV exposed: HIV positive, positive ELISA results (if < 12 months) or positive maternal history (maternal history must be confirmed by maternal serology for seronegative infants <7 months); HIV unexposed: (1) documented negative maternal HIV status, (2) <7 months of age with a negative ELISA, or (3) ≥7 months with a negative ELISA result and reported, but undocumented, negative maternal history; unknown HIV exposure: insufficient evidence to define HIV exposure status.
dAt admission or 24 hours after IS collection or 48 hours after IS collection.
eChildren with >1 IS included in numerator if they received oxygen immediately before either IS procedure.