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Predictive value of pulse oximetry for mortality in infants and children presenting to primary care with clinical pneumonia in rural Malawi: A data linkage study

BACKGROUND: The mortality impact of pulse oximetry use during infant and childhood pneumonia management at the primary healthcare level in low-income countries is unknown. We sought to determine mortality outcomes of infants and children diagnosed and referred using clinical guidelines with or witho...

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Autores principales: Colbourn, Tim, King, Carina, Beard, James, Phiri, Tambosi, Mdala, Malizani, Zadutsa, Beatiwel, Makwenda, Charles, Costello, Anthony, Lufesi, Norman, Mwansambo, Charles, Nambiar, Bejoy, Hooli, Shubhada, French, Neil, Bar Zeev, Naor, Qazi, Shamim Ahmad, Bin Nisar, Yasir, McCollum, Eric D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7584207/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33095763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003300
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author Colbourn, Tim
King, Carina
Beard, James
Phiri, Tambosi
Mdala, Malizani
Zadutsa, Beatiwel
Makwenda, Charles
Costello, Anthony
Lufesi, Norman
Mwansambo, Charles
Nambiar, Bejoy
Hooli, Shubhada
French, Neil
Bar Zeev, Naor
Qazi, Shamim Ahmad
Bin Nisar, Yasir
McCollum, Eric D.
author_facet Colbourn, Tim
King, Carina
Beard, James
Phiri, Tambosi
Mdala, Malizani
Zadutsa, Beatiwel
Makwenda, Charles
Costello, Anthony
Lufesi, Norman
Mwansambo, Charles
Nambiar, Bejoy
Hooli, Shubhada
French, Neil
Bar Zeev, Naor
Qazi, Shamim Ahmad
Bin Nisar, Yasir
McCollum, Eric D.
author_sort Colbourn, Tim
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The mortality impact of pulse oximetry use during infant and childhood pneumonia management at the primary healthcare level in low-income countries is unknown. We sought to determine mortality outcomes of infants and children diagnosed and referred using clinical guidelines with or without pulse oximetry in Malawi. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We conducted a data linkage study of prospective health facility and community case and mortality data. We matched prospectively collected community health worker (CHW) and health centre (HC) outpatient data to prospectively collected hospital and community-based mortality surveillance outcome data, including episodes followed up to and deaths within 30 days of pneumonia diagnosis amongst children 0–59 months old. All data were collected in Lilongwe and Mchinji districts, Malawi, from January 2012 to June 2014. We determined differences in mortality rates using <90% and <93% oxygen saturation (SpO(2)) thresholds and World Health Organization (WHO) and Malawi clinical guidelines for referral. We used unadjusted and adjusted (for age, sex, respiratory rate, and, in analyses of HC data only, Weight for Age Z-score [WAZ]) regression to account for interaction between SpO(2) threshold (pulse oximetry) and clinical guidelines, clustering by child, and CHW or HC catchment area. We matched CHW and HC outpatient data to hospital inpatient records to explore roles of pulse oximetry and clinical guidelines on hospital attendance after referral. From 7,358 CHW and 6,546 HC pneumonia episodes, we linked 417 CHW and 695 HC pneumonia episodes to 30-day mortality outcomes: 16 (3.8%) CHW and 13 (1.9%) HC patients died. SpO(2) thresholds of <90% and <93% identified 1 (6%) of the 16 CHW deaths that were unidentified by integrated community case management (iCCM) WHO referral protocol and 3 (23%) and 4 (31%) of the 13 HC deaths, respectively, that were unidentified by the integrated management of childhood illness (IMCI) WHO protocol. Malawi IMCI referral protocol, which differs from WHO protocol at the HC level and includes chest indrawing, identified all but one of these deaths. SpO(2) < 90% predicted death independently of WHO danger signs compared with SpO(2) ≥ 90%: HC Risk Ratio (RR), 9.37 (95% CI: 2.17–40.4, p = 0.003); CHW RR, 6.85 (1.15–40.9, p = 0.035). SpO(2) < 93% was also predictive versus SpO(2) ≥ 93% at HC level: RR, 6.68 (1.52–29.4, p = 0.012). Hospital referrals and outpatient episodes with referral decision indications were associated with mortality. A substantial proportion of those referred were not found admitted in the inpatients within 7 days of referral advice. All 12 deaths in 73 hospitalised children occurred within 24 hours of arrival in the hospital, which highlights delay in appropriate care seeking. The main limitation of our study was our ability to only match 6% of CHW episodes and 11% of HC episodes to mortality outcome data. CONCLUSIONS: Pulse oximetry identified fatal pneumonia episodes at HCs in Malawi that would otherwise have been missed by WHO referral guidelines alone. Our findings suggest that pulse oximetry could be beneficial in supplementing clinical signs to identify children with pneumonia at high risk of mortality in the outpatient setting in health centres for referral to a hospital for appropriate management.
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spelling pubmed-75842072020-10-28 Predictive value of pulse oximetry for mortality in infants and children presenting to primary care with clinical pneumonia in rural Malawi: A data linkage study Colbourn, Tim King, Carina Beard, James Phiri, Tambosi Mdala, Malizani Zadutsa, Beatiwel Makwenda, Charles Costello, Anthony Lufesi, Norman Mwansambo, Charles Nambiar, Bejoy Hooli, Shubhada French, Neil Bar Zeev, Naor Qazi, Shamim Ahmad Bin Nisar, Yasir McCollum, Eric D. PLoS Med Research Article BACKGROUND: The mortality impact of pulse oximetry use during infant and childhood pneumonia management at the primary healthcare level in low-income countries is unknown. We sought to determine mortality outcomes of infants and children diagnosed and referred using clinical guidelines with or without pulse oximetry in Malawi. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We conducted a data linkage study of prospective health facility and community case and mortality data. We matched prospectively collected community health worker (CHW) and health centre (HC) outpatient data to prospectively collected hospital and community-based mortality surveillance outcome data, including episodes followed up to and deaths within 30 days of pneumonia diagnosis amongst children 0–59 months old. All data were collected in Lilongwe and Mchinji districts, Malawi, from January 2012 to June 2014. We determined differences in mortality rates using <90% and <93% oxygen saturation (SpO(2)) thresholds and World Health Organization (WHO) and Malawi clinical guidelines for referral. We used unadjusted and adjusted (for age, sex, respiratory rate, and, in analyses of HC data only, Weight for Age Z-score [WAZ]) regression to account for interaction between SpO(2) threshold (pulse oximetry) and clinical guidelines, clustering by child, and CHW or HC catchment area. We matched CHW and HC outpatient data to hospital inpatient records to explore roles of pulse oximetry and clinical guidelines on hospital attendance after referral. From 7,358 CHW and 6,546 HC pneumonia episodes, we linked 417 CHW and 695 HC pneumonia episodes to 30-day mortality outcomes: 16 (3.8%) CHW and 13 (1.9%) HC patients died. SpO(2) thresholds of <90% and <93% identified 1 (6%) of the 16 CHW deaths that were unidentified by integrated community case management (iCCM) WHO referral protocol and 3 (23%) and 4 (31%) of the 13 HC deaths, respectively, that were unidentified by the integrated management of childhood illness (IMCI) WHO protocol. Malawi IMCI referral protocol, which differs from WHO protocol at the HC level and includes chest indrawing, identified all but one of these deaths. SpO(2) < 90% predicted death independently of WHO danger signs compared with SpO(2) ≥ 90%: HC Risk Ratio (RR), 9.37 (95% CI: 2.17–40.4, p = 0.003); CHW RR, 6.85 (1.15–40.9, p = 0.035). SpO(2) < 93% was also predictive versus SpO(2) ≥ 93% at HC level: RR, 6.68 (1.52–29.4, p = 0.012). Hospital referrals and outpatient episodes with referral decision indications were associated with mortality. A substantial proportion of those referred were not found admitted in the inpatients within 7 days of referral advice. All 12 deaths in 73 hospitalised children occurred within 24 hours of arrival in the hospital, which highlights delay in appropriate care seeking. The main limitation of our study was our ability to only match 6% of CHW episodes and 11% of HC episodes to mortality outcome data. CONCLUSIONS: Pulse oximetry identified fatal pneumonia episodes at HCs in Malawi that would otherwise have been missed by WHO referral guidelines alone. Our findings suggest that pulse oximetry could be beneficial in supplementing clinical signs to identify children with pneumonia at high risk of mortality in the outpatient setting in health centres for referral to a hospital for appropriate management. Public Library of Science 2020-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC7584207/ /pubmed/33095763 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003300 Text en © 2020 Colbourn et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Colbourn, Tim
King, Carina
Beard, James
Phiri, Tambosi
Mdala, Malizani
Zadutsa, Beatiwel
Makwenda, Charles
Costello, Anthony
Lufesi, Norman
Mwansambo, Charles
Nambiar, Bejoy
Hooli, Shubhada
French, Neil
Bar Zeev, Naor
Qazi, Shamim Ahmad
Bin Nisar, Yasir
McCollum, Eric D.
Predictive value of pulse oximetry for mortality in infants and children presenting to primary care with clinical pneumonia in rural Malawi: A data linkage study
title Predictive value of pulse oximetry for mortality in infants and children presenting to primary care with clinical pneumonia in rural Malawi: A data linkage study
title_full Predictive value of pulse oximetry for mortality in infants and children presenting to primary care with clinical pneumonia in rural Malawi: A data linkage study
title_fullStr Predictive value of pulse oximetry for mortality in infants and children presenting to primary care with clinical pneumonia in rural Malawi: A data linkage study
title_full_unstemmed Predictive value of pulse oximetry for mortality in infants and children presenting to primary care with clinical pneumonia in rural Malawi: A data linkage study
title_short Predictive value of pulse oximetry for mortality in infants and children presenting to primary care with clinical pneumonia in rural Malawi: A data linkage study
title_sort predictive value of pulse oximetry for mortality in infants and children presenting to primary care with clinical pneumonia in rural malawi: a data linkage study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7584207/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33095763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003300
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