Faculty Opinions recommendation of A host-protein based assay to differentiate between bacterial and viral infections in preschool children (OPPORTUNITY): a double-blind, multicentre, validation study.

Author(s):  
Brian Eley
2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 431-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chantal B van Houten ◽  
Joris A H de Groot ◽  
Adi Klein ◽  
Isaac Srugo ◽  
Irena Chistyakov ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. e000416
Author(s):  
Chantal van Houten ◽  
Josephine Sophia van de Maat ◽  
Christiana Naaktgeboren ◽  
Louis Bont ◽  
R Oostenbrink

ObjectiveTo determine whether updating a diagnostic prediction model by adding a combination assay (tumour necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand, interferon γ induced protein-10 and C reactive protein (CRP)) can accurately identify children with pneumonia or other serious bacterial infections (SBIs).DesignObservational double-blind diagnostic study.SettingTwo hospitals in Israel and four hospitals in the Netherlands.Patients591 children, aged 1–60 months, presenting with lower respiratory tract infections or fever without source. 96 of them had SBIs. The original Feverkidstool, a polytomous logistic regression model including clinical variables and CRP, was recalibrated and thereafter updated by using the assay.Main outcome measuresPneumonia, other SBIs or no SBI.ResultsThe recalibrated original Feverkidstool discriminated well between SBIs and viral infections, with a c-statistic for pneumonia of 0.84 (95% CI 0.77 to 0.92) and 0.82 (95% CI 0.77 to 0.86) for other SBIs. The discriminatory ability increased when CRP was replaced by the combination assay; c-statistic for pneumonia increased to 0.89 (95% CI 0.82 to 0.96) and for other SBIs to 0.91 (95% CI 0.87 to 0.94). This updated Feverkidstool improved diagnosis of SBIs mainly in children with low–moderate risk estimates of SBIs.ConclusionWe improved the diagnostic accuracy of the Feverkidstool by replacing CRP with a combination assay to predict pneumonia or other SBIs in febrile children. The updated Feverkidstool has the largest potential to rule out bacterial infections and thus to decrease unnecessary antibiotic prescription in children with low-to-moderate predicted risk of SBIs.


SLEEP ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. A161-A161
Author(s):  
Chris Fernandez ◽  
Sam Rusk ◽  
Nick Glattard ◽  
Yoav Nygate ◽  
Fred Turkington ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Despite an appreciable rise in sleep wellness and sleep medicine A.I. research publications, public data corpuses, institutional support, and health A.I. research funding opportunities, the availability of controlled-retrospective, hybrid-retrospective-prospective, and prospective-RCT quality clinical validation study evidence is limited with respect to their potential clinical impact. Furthermore, only a few practical examples of A.I. technologies are validated, in use today clinically, and widely adopted, to assist in sleep diagnoses and treatment. In this study, we contribute to this growing body of clinical A.I. validation evidence and experimental design methodologies with an interoperable A.I. scoring engine in Adult and Pediatric populations. Methods Stratified random sampling with proportionate allocation was applied to a database of N>10,000 retrospective diagnostic clinical polysomnography (PSG), selected by evidence grading standards, with controls applied for OSA severity, diagnoses; sleep, psychiatric, neurologic, neurodevelopmental, cardiac, pulmonary, metabolic disorders, medications; benzodiazepines, antidepressants, stimulants, opiates, sleep aids, demographic groups of interest; sex, adult age, pediatric age, BMI, weight, height, and patient-reported sleepiness, to establish representative N=100 Adult and N=100 Pediatric samples. Double Blinded scoring was prospectively collected for each sample by 3 experienced RPSGT certified sleep technologists randomized from a pool of 9 scorers. Sensitivity (PA), Specificity (NA), Accuracy (OA), Kappa (K), and 95% Bootstrap CI’s are presented for sleep stages, OSA/CSA, hypopnea 3%/4%, arousals, limb movements, Cheyenne-Stokes respiration, periodic breathing, atrial fibrillation, and other events, and normative, mild, moderate, and severe OSA categories for global-AHI and REM-AHI. Results for Sleep Staging and OSA Severity Diagnostic Accuracy are summarized. Results A.I. scoring performance meet but in most cases exceeded initial clinical validation study (N=72 Adults, 2017) PA, NA, OA, K point-estimates and confidence-interval results for the 26 event types and 8 AHI-categories evaluated. The Adult sample showed 87%/94% Sensitivity/Specificity across all stages (Wake/N1/N2/N3/REM) and 94%/96% Sensitivity/Specificity for AHI>=15. The Pediatric sample showed 87%/93% Sensitivity/Specificity staging, 89%/98% Sensitivity/Specificity AHI>=15. Observed Accuracy was >90% for Adults and Pediatrics all 26 events and 7 AHI-categories analyzed, except REM-AHI>=5 (85%/82% Adults/Pediatrics). Conclusion We provide clinical validation evidence that demonstrates interoperable A.I. scoring performance in representative Adult and Pediatric patient clinical PSG samples when compared to prospective, double-blind scoring panel. Support (if any):


Author(s):  
Анна Александровна Зуйкова ◽  
Ольга Николаевна Красноруцкая ◽  
Юлия Александровна Котова ◽  
Даниил Юрьевич Бугримов

Острые респираторные вирусные инфекции (ОРВИ) представляют собой серьезную проблему для общественного здравоохранения во всем мире, вызывая значительную заболеваемость и смертность среди людей всех возрастных групп. Дети заражаются в среднем в два-три раза чаще, чем взрослые. Целью исследования является оценка эффективности препарата Деринат в комплексном лечении острых респираторных вирусных инфекций у детей дошкольного возраста в условиях амбулаторно-поликлинического приема. В исследование были включены дети в возрасте от 3 до 7 лет (включительно) не являющиеся школьниками, с клиническим диагнозом острая респираторная вирусная инфекция (ОРВИ), с симптомами, проявляющимися не длительнее 48 часов, не подвергавшихся противовирусной и иммуномодулирующей терапией в течение 30 дней до текущего посещения врача. В результате проведенного исследования установлено, что комплексное лечение ОРВИ у детей дошкольного возраста с применением препарата Деринат с первого дня терапии позволяет устранить отдельные симптомы ОРВИ значительно быстрее и эффективнее, чем при стандартных схемах терапии: ринорея и заложенность носа купируется на 2 день терапии, а гиперемия ротоглотки и отечность миндалин - на 3 день. Назначение изучаемого препарата в комплексном лечении ОРВИ в 2,4 раза повышает «Индекс здоровья» у дошкольников по сравнению с показателем при стандартных схемах лечения Acute respiratory viral infections are a serious public health problem worldwide, causing significant morbidity and mortality among people of all age groups. Children are infected on average two to three times more often than adults. The aim of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the drug Derinat in the complex treatment of acute respiratory viral infections in preschool children in outpatient settings. The study included children aged 3 to 7 years (inclusive) who are not schoolchildren, with a clinical diagnosis of acute respiratory viral infection, with symptoms that manifest no longer than 48 hours, who were not subjected to antiviral and immunomodulatory therapy for 30 days before the current doctor's visit. As a result of the study, it was found that the complex treatment of acute respiratory viral infections in preschool children with the use of the drug Derinat from the first day of therapy can eliminate individual symptoms of ARVI much faster and more effectively than with standard therapy regimens: rhinorrhea and nasal congestion are stopped on day 2 of therapy, and oropharyngeal hyperemia and tonsillar edema - on day 3. The administration of the studied drug in the complex treatment of acute respiratory viral infections increases the "Health Index" in preschool children by 2.4 times compared to the indicator for standard treatment regimens


2020 ◽  
pp. archdischild-2020-318971
Author(s):  
Alexandra Wallace ◽  
Owen Sinclair ◽  
Michael Shepherd ◽  
Jocelyn Neutze ◽  
Adrian Trenholme ◽  
...  

ObjectiveTo determine if administration of oral prednisolone to preschool children with acute wheeze alters respiratory outcomes.DesignDouble-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled equivalence trial.SettingThree hospitals in New Zealand.Patients477 children aged 24–59 months with acute wheeze associated with respiratory illness.Interventions2 mg/kg (maximum 40 mg) oral prednisolone or similar placebo, once daily for 3 days.Main outcome measuresPrimary outcome was change in Preschool Respiratory Assessment Measure (PRAM) score 24 hours after intervention. Secondary outcomes included PRAM score at 4 hours, length of emergency department and inpatient stays, admission and representation rates, time to return to normal activities and use of additional oral prednisolone or intravenous medications. Analysis was by intention-to-treat.ResultsThere was no difference between groups for change in PRAM score at 24 hours (difference between means −0.39, 95% CI −0.84 to 0.06, p=0.09). Absolute PRAM score was lower in the prednisolone group at 4 hours (median (IQR) 1 (0–2) vs 2 (0–3), p=0.01) and 24 hours (0 (0–1) vs 0 (0–1), p=0.01), when symptoms had resolved for most children regardless of initial treatment. Admission rate, requirement for additional oral prednisolone and use of intravenous medication were lower in the prednisolone group, although there were no differences between groups for time taken to return to normal activities or rates of representation within 7 days.ConclusionOral prednisolone does not alter respiratory outcomes at 24 hours or beyond in preschool children presenting with acute wheeze.


BMJ Open ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. e025378
Author(s):  
Jing Zhang ◽  
Liebin Zhao ◽  
Deyu Zhao ◽  
Zhimin Chen ◽  
Shenghui Li ◽  
...  

ObjectiveThe limited existing asthma control questionnaires that are available for children 5 years of age or younger in China mostly assess only the impairment domain of asthma control. Here, the English version of the Test for Respiratory and Asthma Control in Kids (TRACK) was translated into Chinese and validated for its application in asthma control in preschool children.DesignProspective validation study.Setting and participantsA total of 321 Chinese preschool children suffering from asthma completed the study from December 2017 to February 2018.MethodThe TRACK translation into Chinese employed the translation and back translation technique. The caregivers of the preschool children with asthma symptoms completed TRACK during two clinical visits over 4–6 weeks. Moreover, the physicians completed a Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA)-based asthma control survey at both visits. The utility of TRACK for assessing the change in asthma control status and its reliability and discriminant validity were evaluated.ResultsThe Chinese version of TRACK showed internal consistency reliability values of 0.63 and 0.71 at each visit, respectively (Cronbach’s α). The test–retest reliability was 0.62 for individuals whose GINA-based assessment results were the same at both visits (n=206). The TRACK scores for the children in the various asthma control categories were significantly different (p<0.001). Children recommended for increased treatment by the physicians had lower TRACK scores than those recommended for no change in treatment or decreased treatment (p<0.001).ConclusionThe study verifies the validity and reliability of the Chinese version of TRACK. Changes in the TRACK scores effectively reflected the level of asthma control in preschool children and guided further treatment strategies.Trial registration numberNCT02649803


1994 ◽  
Vol 3 (7) ◽  
pp. S43-S47 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Fiocchi ◽  
P. Signoroni ◽  
P. Bruni ◽  
M. Galeone ◽  
E. DeCet ◽  
...  

The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether nedocromil sodium benefits urban asthmatic children showing seasonal bronchial hyper-reactivity to ultrasonic nebulization of distilled water (UNDW). A prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, double-blind study was carried out at the outpatient pulmonology service at a tertiary-care teaching hospital. Twelve children living in Milan, who were 7–17 years of age, who were SPT and RAST-negative to perennial allergens, who were suffering from episodic asthma, and showing seasonal bronchial hyper-reactivity to UNDW during winter, participated in this study. All the children received either placebo or nedocromil sodium, 4 mg every 6 h for 6 weeks. Spirometry and UNDW challenge were done at the following times: day−7; day 0; day 1; day 7; day 14; day 28; day 42. No differences were found in the basal spirometric parameters, which were normal in both nedocromil and placebo groups. Bronchial reactivity to UNDW was found to be significantly decreased in the group treated with nedocromtl starting from day 7. It is therefore concluded that nedocromil sodium can reverse bronchial hyper-reactivity caused by seasonal factors such as cold, viral infections and atmospheric pollutants in children suffering from asthma.


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