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 RC Howie; Karen L Kotloff; Orin S Levine; Shabir A Madhi; +26 more... David R Murdoch; J Anthony G Scott ORCID logo; 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 MA Zaman; Scott L Zeger; Katherine L O'Brien; PERCH Study Group; (2017) Chest Radiograph Findings in Childhood Pneumonia Cases From the Multisite PERCH Study. Clinical infectious diseases, 64 (suppl_). S262-S270. ISSN 1058-4838 DOI: 10.1093/cid/cix089
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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.


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