Implication of the 2014 World Health Organization Integrated Management of Childhood Illness Pneumonia Guidelines with and without pulse oximetry use in Malawi: A retrospective cohort study

S. Hooli, C. Makwenda, N. Lufesi, T. Colbourn, T. Mvalo, E. McCollum, C. King
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Abstract

Background: Under-5 pneumonia mortality remains high in low-income countries. In 2014 the World Health Organization (WHO) advised that children with chest indrawing pneumonia, but without danger signs or peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) < 90% be treated in the community, rather than hospitalized. In Malawi there is limited pulse oximetry availability. Methods: Secondary analysis of 13,413 under-5 pneumonia cases in Malawi. Pneumonia associated case fatality ratios (CFR) were calculated by disease severity under the assumptions of the 2005 and 2014 WHO Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) guidelines, with and without pulse oximetry. We investigated if pulse oximetry readings were missing not at random (MNAR). Results: The CFR of patients classified as having non-severe pneumonia per the 2014 IMCI guidelines doubled under the assumption that pulse oximetry was not available (1.5% without pulse oximetry vs 0.7% with pulse oximetry, P<0.001). When 2014 IMCI guidelines were applied with pulse oximetry and a SpO2 < 90% as the threshold for referral and/or admission, the number of cases meeting hospitalization criteria decreased by 70.3%. Unrecorded pulse oximetry readings were MNAR with an adjusted odds for mortality of 4.9 (3.8, 6.3), similar to that of a SpO2 < 90%. Although fewer girls were hospitalized, female sex was an independent mortality risk factor. Conclusions: In Malawi, implementation of the 2014 WHO IMCI pneumonia guidelines, without pulse oximetry, will miss high risk cases. Alternatively, implementation of pulse oximetry may result in a large reduction in hospitalization rates without significantly increasing non-severe pneumonia associated CFR if the inability to obtain a pulse oximetry reading is considered a WHO danger sign.
2014年世界卫生组织儿童疾病肺炎综合管理指南在马拉维使用和不使用脉搏血氧仪的含义:一项回顾性队列研究
背景:低收入国家的5岁以下肺炎死亡率仍然很高。2014年,世界卫生组织(世界卫生组织)建议,患有胸闷性肺炎但没有危险迹象或外周血氧饱和度(SpO2)<90%的儿童在社区接受治疗,而不是住院治疗。在马拉维,脉搏血氧计的可用性有限。方法:对马拉维13413例5岁以下儿童肺炎病例进行二次分析。根据2005年和2014年世界卫生组织儿童疾病综合管理(IMCI)指南的假设,在使用和不使用脉搏血氧计的情况下,根据疾病严重程度计算肺炎相关病死率(CFR)。我们调查了脉搏血氧计读数是否缺失,而不是随机的(MNAR)。结果:在假设脉搏血氧仪不可用的情况下,根据2014年IMCI指南被归类为非重症肺炎的患者的CFR翻了一番(没有脉搏血氧法的患者为1.5%,有脉搏血氧术的患者为0.7%,P<0.001)。当2014年IMMI指南以脉搏血氧计和SpO2<90%作为转诊和/或入院的阈值时,符合住院标准的病例数量减少了70.3%。未记录的脉搏血氧仪读数为MNAR,调整后的死亡率为4.9(3.8,6.3),类似于血氧饱和度<90%的情况。尽管住院的女孩较少,但女性是一个独立的死亡风险因素。结论:在马拉维,在没有脉搏血氧测定的情况下,实施2014年世界卫生组织IMCI肺炎指南将错过高风险病例。或者,如果无法获得脉搏血氧仪读数被认为是世界卫生组织的危险信号,那么实施脉搏血氧计可能会导致住院率大幅降低,而不会显著增加非严重肺炎相关病死率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Gates Open Research
Gates Open Research Immunology and Microbiology-Immunology and Microbiology (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
90
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