Feasibility and Acceptability Followed by Effectiveness of bCPAP for Treatment of Bangladeshi Children With Severe Pneumonia
Child-bCPAP
1 other identifier
observational
20
1 country
2
Brief Summary
Background: Feasibility and acceptability of bubble continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) were not evaluated in childhood severe pneumonia in developing countries at a larger scale. Objective:
- 1.To describe prevailing structural and functional conditions and other operational challenges in nontertiary hospitals in Bangladesh that would need to be addressed in order to introduce bubble CPAP as part of the management of children with severe pneumonia enabling a successful interventional trial.
- 2.To develop and test bubble CPAP training materials of relevance to clinical staff providing care for children with severe pneumonia in district general hospitals.
- 3.To determine the prevalence of hypoxaemia among hospitalised children with severe pneumonia in non-tertiary/district hospitals, current practices with regard to management and clinical outcome, to support power calculations of a future interventional trial of bubble CPAP for children with severe pneumonia.
- 4.To document the early experience, particularly the feasibility and acceptability of introducing bubble CPAP in selected non-tertiary/district hospitals.
- 5.To describe the structural and functional conditions and operational challenges that may influence the introduction of bubble CPAP.
- 6.To have bubble CPAP training materials that can be delivered cheaply and repeatedly to a level of comprehension of staff providing care to children with pneumonia in district general hospitals in Bangladesh.
- 7.A quantitative analysis of the incidence of hypoxaemia among hospitalised children with severe pneumonia, current management practices and clinical outcomes.
- 8.A qualitative assessment of the feasibility of introducing bubble CPAP.
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach
participants targeted
Target at below P25 for all trials
Started Dec 2018
Typical duration for all trials
2 active sites
Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.
Trial Relationships
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Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
First Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
October 16, 2018
CompletedStudy Start
First participant enrolled
December 1, 2018
CompletedPrimary Completion
Last participant's last visit for primary outcome
December 31, 2021
CompletedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
December 31, 2021
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
February 15, 2022
CompletedFebruary 15, 2022
December 1, 2021
3.1 years
October 16, 2018
February 3, 2022
Conditions
Keywords
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (4)
The structural, functional and operational challenges will be described
Human resources, Supply chain, logistics equipment maintenance, power failure, disconnection of oxygen with local complications will be identified.
44 month
To have bubble CPAP training materials that can be delivered cheaply and repeatedly to a level of comprehension of staff providing care to children with pneumonia in district general hospitals in Bangladesh
The training module, Standard Operating Procedure, treatment algorithm will be provided to the hospital staff. Hands-on training will be done.
44 month
A quantitative analysis of the incidence of hypoxaemia among hospitalised children with severe pneumonia, current management practices and clinical outcomes
Prevalence, management, mortality, referral, discharge, hospital stay, oxygen therapy duration of severe pneumonia cases will be identified.
44 month
Feasibility and acceptability of introducing bubble CPAP
Challenges related to the introduction of bCPAP, enrollment, patient management with follow-up recording, human resources, respiratory support will be identified.
44 month
Study Arms (1)
bubble CPAP arm
Oxygen will be delivered by Bubble CPAP device, which will have three components: 1. Continuous gas flow into the circuit: The gas flow rate required to generate CPAP is usually 5-10 L/min. 2. A nasal interface connecting the child's airway with the circuit: short nasal prongs are generally used to deliver nasal CPAP. They must be carefully fitted to minimize leakage of air (otherwise, CPAP will not be achieved) . 3. An expiratory arm with the distal end submerged in water to generate end-expiratory pressure: in bubble CPAP, the positive pressure is maintained by placing the far end of the expiratory tubing in water. The pressure is adjusted by altering the depth of the tube under the surface of the water.
Interventions
In Bubble CPAP, pressurized oxygen from an oxygen cylinder is delivered to the nasopharynx of the baby. An underwater tube (expiratory arm) that acts as a blow off valve is interposed between the oxygen source and the baby. Adjusting the height of the water column above the exit of the tube can regulate the pressure in the system and the amount of CPAP delivered to the baby. The constant bubbling of gas through the blow off mechanism delivers the bubbling CPAP effect. Oxygen may be delivered by nasal prongs inserted into the nostril of child. The system has three components: 1. Continuous gas flow into the circuit: The gas flow rate required to generate CPAP is usually 5-10 L/min. 2. A nasal interface connecting the child's airway with the circuit: 3. An expiratory arm with the distal end submerged in water to generate end-expiratory pressure. The source of oxygen will be either an oxygen concentrator or cylinder, central distribution through pipelines.
Eligibility Criteria
Children aged 2-24 months having hypoxaemia in pneumonia (Pneumonia defined by WHO criteria)
You may qualify if:
- Staff:
- Staff (medical and nursing) employed at the two selected hospitals with duties that include care of children with pneumonia
- Staff who agree to participate and give written informed consent
- Children for assessment of hypoxaemia in pneumonia and outcomes:
- Age between 2 - 24 months
- Attend one of the two study hospitals for the assessment of pneumonia by hospital clinician.
- Pneumonia defined by WHO criteria
- Children receiving bubble CPAP:
- Age between 2 - 24 months.
- Diagnosis of pneumonia by a hospital clinician together with hypoxaemia (SpO2\<90%).
- Parent/guardian gives informed consent to participate in the study
You may not qualify if:
- Hospital staff:
- Children for assessment of hypoxaemia in pneumonia and outcomes, and children receiving bubble CPAP:
- Known congenital heart disease, asthma, pulmonary TB and other chronic respiratory disorders
Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.
Sponsors & Collaborators
Study Sites (2)
Institute of Child and Mother Health
Dhaka, 1212, Bangladesh
250 bedded General hospital
Kustia, Bangladesh
MeSH Terms
Conditions
Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Study Officials
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
Md. Mohammod J Chisti, PhD
Senior Scientist
Study Design
- Study Type
- observational
- Observational Model
- OTHER
- Time Perspective
- PROSPECTIVE
- Sponsor Type
- OTHER
- Responsible Party
- SPONSOR
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
October 16, 2018
First Posted
February 15, 2022
Study Start
December 1, 2018
Primary Completion
December 31, 2021
Study Completion
December 31, 2021
Last Updated
February 15, 2022
Record last verified: 2021-12
Data Sharing
- IPD Sharing
- Will not share
After the end of the study, data will be analyzed as ter the defined data analysis plan on the protocol. Study results will be shared with other researchers by journal publications, conferences proceedings and dissemination programs