Wellcome Open Research (Jan 2018)

Children’s Oxygen Administration Strategies Trial (COAST):  A randomised controlled trial of high flow versus oxygen versus control in African children with severe pneumonia [version 2; referees: 2 approved]

  • Kathryn Maitland,
  • Sarah Kiguli,
  • Robert O. Opoka,
  • Peter Olupot-Olupot,
  • Charles Engoru,
  • Patricia Njuguna,
  • Victor Bandika,
  • Ayub Mpoya,
  • Andrew Bush,
  • Thomas N. Williams,
  • Richard Grieve,
  • Zia Sadique,
  • John Fraser,
  • David Harrison,
  • Kathy Rowan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.12688/wellcomeopenres.12747.2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2

Abstract

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Background: In Africa, the clinical syndrome of pneumonia remains the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in children in the post-neonatal period. This represents a significant burden on in-patient services. The targeted use of oxygen and simple, non-invasive methods of respiratory support may be a highly cost-effective means of improving outcome, but the optimal oxygen saturation threshold that results in benefit and the best strategy for delivery are yet to be tested in adequately powered randomised controlled trials. There is, however, an accumulating literature about the harms of oxygen therapy across a range of acute and emergency situations that have stimulated a number of trials investigating permissive hypoxia. Methods: In 4200 African children, aged 2 months to 12 years, presenting to 5 hospitals in East Africa with respiratory distress and hypoxia (oxygen saturation or = 80% (permissive hypoxia); and High flow using AIrVO2TM compared with low flow delivery (routine care). Discussion: The overarching objective is to address the key research gaps in the therapeutic use of oxygen in resource-limited setting in order to provide a better evidence base for future management guidelines. The trial has been designed to address the poor outcomes of children in sub-Saharan Africa, which are associated with high rates of in-hospital mortality, 9-10% (for those with oxygen saturations of 80-92%) and 26-30% case fatality for those with oxygen saturations <80%. Clinical trial registration: ISRCTN15622505 Trial status: Recruiting

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