PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Antibiotic treatment failure in children aged 1 to 59 months with World Health Organization-defined severe pneumonia in Malawi: A CPAP IMPACT trial secondary analysis.

  • Tisungane Mvalo,
  • Andrew G Smith,
  • Michelle Eckerle,
  • Mina C Hosseinipour,
  • Davie Kondowe,
  • Dhananjay Vaidya,
  • Yisi Liu,
  • Kelly Corbett,
  • Dan Nansongole,
  • Takondwa A Mtimaukanena,
  • Norman Lufesi,
  • Eric D McCollum

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278938
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 12
p. e0278938

Abstract

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BackgroundPneumonia is a leading cause of mortality in children MethodsParticipants were 1-59 months old with World Health Organization-defined severe pneumonia and hypoxemia, severe malnutrition, and/or HIV exposure/infection. All participants received intravenous antibiotics per standard care. First-line antibiotics were benzylpenicillin and gentamicin for five days. Study staff assessed patients for first-line antibiotic failure daily between days 3-6. When identified, patients failing antibiotics were switched to second-line ceftriaxone. Analyses excluded children receiving ceftriaxone and/or deceased by hospital day two. We compared characteristics between patients with and without treatment failure and fit multivariable logistic regression models to evaluate associations between treatment failure and admission characteristics.ResultsFrom June 2015-March 2018, 644 children were enrolled and 538 analyzed. Antibiotic failure was identified in 251 (46.7%) participants, and 19/251 (7.6%) died. Treatment failure occurred more frequently with severe malnutrition (50.2% (126/251) vs 28.2% (81/287), pConclusionSevere malnutrition and pre-hospital antibiotic use predicted antibiotic treatment failure in this high-risk severe pneumonia pediatric population in Malawi. Our findings suggest addressing complex sociomedical conditions like severe malnutrition and improving pneumonia etiology diagnostics will be key for better targeting interventions to improve childhood pneumonia outcomes.