Overview

Supportive Treatment and Antibiotics for Mild Pediatric Pneumonia

Status:
Recruiting
Trial end date:
2023-07-31
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
National guidelines make two recommendations for treatment of young children with mild pneumonia - one to avoid routine antibiotics and another to use narrow-spectrum antibiotics. No studies have compared the effectiveness of these two approaches. This pilot study will evaluate study processes and feasibility of a future clinical trial that proposes to test whether low-risk children managed as outpatients with mild community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) treated with supportive treatment without antibiotics will have a similar clinical response, with fewer adverse effects, compared with those treated with a supportive treatment plan that includes antibiotics.
Phase:
Phase 4
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Ann & Robert H Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago
Treatments:
Amoxicillin
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

1. Age 12-71 months; and

2. Diagnosis of CAP, defined using established criteria:

1. Signs and symptoms of lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI), defined as any of
the following:

- new or different cough; or

- new or different sputum production; or

- chest pain; or

- dyspnea/shortness of breath; or

- documented tachypnea; or

- abnormal findings consistent with LRTI on physical examination (e.g.,
crackles/rales, rhonchi, wheezing) and

2. Fever, defined as tactile temperature at home or measured temperature ≥38ºC
rectal, ≥37.7ºC oral, or ≥37.5ºC axillary, and

3. Clinician diagnosis of CAP,

3. Intention to treat as an outpatient after ED/primary care visit, and

4. Mild disease, defined as lack of respiratory distress per adapted Pediatric Infectious
Diseases Society/Infectious Diseases Society of America criteria: none of the
following: dyspnea, concerning retractions per treating clinician, grunting, nasal
flaring, apnea, altered mental status, SpO2<93% in room air, or respiratory rate >50
breaths per minute for ages 12-24 months or respiratory rate > 40 breaths per minute
if age>24 months.

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Hospitalization within one-month preceding study visit; or

2. Incomplete immunization status (<2 doses of Hib and pneumococcal vaccines); or

3. Chronic complex medical conditions (chronic heart disease followed by cardiology,
chronic lung disease (not including asthma), congenital airway or lung malformations,
cystic fibrosis, tracheostomy tube, requiring positive-pressure ventilation,
neuromuscular disorders affecting the lungs or chest wall); or

4. Conditions that compromise the immune system (HIV with CD4 count less than 400,
primary immunodeficiency, asplenia, sickle cell disease, receipt of hematopoietic stem
cell or solid organ transplant, cancer on active chemotherapy, immunosuppressive
agents, daily corticosteroids for more than 7 consecutive days in past 14 days); or

5. Systemic antibiotic receipt (more than 1 dose) within the previous two weeks of CAP
diagnosis; or

6. Radiographic findings of a consolidation of a concerning size or complexity in the
view of the treating clinician; or

7. Radiographic findings of complicated pneumonia (pleural effusion larger than trace in
size, empyema, [complex/septated collection] abscess, necrotic lung disease); or

8. Pneumonia known to be due to bacterial source at the time of enrollment, as documented
by blood culture or PCR if available, or another clear source of bacterial infection
requiring immediate antibiotics; or

9. Diagnosed with pneumonia in the previous month; or

10. Provider diagnosis of aspiration pneumonia; or

11. Severe (type 1) drug allergy to amoxicillin; or

12. Any other condition that in the judgement of investigators or the clinical team could
affect safety of the subject; or

13. No access to a telephone or video technology for follow-up; or

14. Current enrollment in another clinical trial of an investigational agent; or

15. Previous enrollment in this trial; or

16. Parent/guardian non-English or non-Spanish speaking; or

17. Known allergy to milk and/or red dye.