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Chest radiograph findings in childhood pneumonia cases from the multisite PERCH study

  • Nicholas Fancourt
  • , Maria Deloria Knoll
  • , Henry C. Baggett
  • , W. Abdullah Brooks
  • , Daniel R. Feikin
  • , Laura L. Hammitt
  • , Stephen R.C. Howie
  • , Karen L. Kotloff
  • , Orin S. Levine
  • , Shabir A. Madhi
  • , David R. Murdoch
  • , J. Anthony G. Scott
  • , Donald M. Thea
  • , Juliet O. Awori
  • , Breanna Barger-Kamate
  • , James Chipeta
  • , Andrea N. DeLuca
  • , Mahamadou Diallo
  • , Amanda J. Driscoll
  • , Bernard E. Ebruke
  • Melissa M. Higdon, Yasmin Jahan, Ruth A. Karron, Nasreen Mahomed, David P. Moore, Kamrun Nahar, Sathapana Naorat, Micah Silaba Ominde, Daniel E. Park, Christine Prosperi, Somwe Wa Somwe, Somsak Thamthitiwat, Syed M.A. Zaman, Scott L. Zeger, Katherine L. O'Brien, Wei Fu, E. Wangeci Kagucia, Mengying Li, Zhenke Wu, Nora L. Watson, Jane Crawley, Hubert P. Endtz, Khalequ Zaman, Doli Goswami, Lokman Hossain, Hasan Ashraf, Martin Antonio, Jessica McLellan, Eunice Machuka, Alice Kamau
  • Johns Hopkins University
  • Murdoch Children's Research Institute
  • Royal Children's Hospital
  • Thailand Ministry of Public Health-US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Collaboration
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research Bangladesh
  • Kenya Medical Research Institute
  • London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
  • The University of Auckland
  • University of Otago
  • University of Maryland, Baltimore
  • Gates Foundation
  • University of the Witwatersrand
  • Canterbury District Health Board
  • Boston University
  • Spokane Emergency Physicians
  • University of Zambia
  • University Teaching Hospital Lusaka
  • Centre pour le Développement des Vaccines (CVD-Mali)
  • George Washington University
  • The EMMES Corporation
  • University of Oxford

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

56 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background. Chest radiographs (CXRs) are frequently used to assess pneumonia cases. Variations in CXR appearances between epidemiological settings and their correlation with clinical signs are not well documented. Methods. The Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health project enrolled 4232 cases of hospitalized World Health Organization (WHO)-defined severe and very severe pneumonia from 9 sites in 7 countries (Bangladesh, the Gambia, Kenya, Mali, South Africa, Thailand, and Zambia). At admission, each case underwent a standardized assessment of clinical signs and pneumonia risk factors by trained health personnel, and a CXR was taken that was interpreted using the standardized WHO methodology. CXRs were categorized as abnormal (consolidation and/or other infiltrate), normal, or uninterpretable. Results. CXRs were interpretable in 3587 (85%) cases, of which 1935 (54%) were abnormal (site range, 35%-64%). Cases with abnormal CXRs were more likely than those with normal CXRs to have hypoxemia (45% vs 26%), crackles (69% vs 62%), tachypnea (85% vs 80%), or fever (20% vs 16%) and less likely to have wheeze (30% vs 38%; all P < .05). CXR consolidation was associated with a higher case fatality ratio at 30-day follow-up (13.5%) compared to other infiltrate (4.7%) or normal (4.9%) CXRs. Conclusions. Clinically diagnosed pneumonia cases with abnormal CXRs were more likely to have signs typically associated with pneumonia. However, CXR-normal cases were common, and clinical signs considered indicative of pneumonia were present in substantial proportions of these cases. CXR-consolidation cases represent a group with an increased likelihood of death at 30 days post-discharge.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)S262-S270
JournalClinical Infectious Diseases
Volume64
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2017
Externally publishedYes

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • Chest radiograph
  • Mortality
  • Pediatrics
  • Pneumonia
  • Signs and symptoms

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