Title:
Epidemiology of Hypoxic Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Children Under 5 Years of Age: An Observational Study in Northern India

dc.contributor.authorShally Awasthi
dc.contributor.authorTuhina Rastogi
dc.contributor.authorAnuj Kumar Pandey
dc.contributor.authorChittaranjan Roy
dc.contributor.authorKripanath Mishra
dc.contributor.authorNeelam Verma
dc.contributor.authorChandra Bhushan Kumar
dc.contributor.authorPankaj Kumar Jain
dc.contributor.authorRajesh Yadav
dc.contributor.authorAbhishek Chauhan
dc.contributor.authorNamita Mohindra
dc.contributor.authorRam Chandra Shukla
dc.contributor.authorMonika Agarwal
dc.contributor.authorChandra Mani Pandey
dc.contributor.authorNeera Kohli
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-07T11:04:25Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.description.abstractBackground: Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is the leading cause of under-five mortality in India. An increased risk of mortality has been reported in cases of hypoxic pneumonia. Methods: The primary objective of this study was to assess the proportion of children aged 2–59 months, hospitalized with hypoxic CAP, as well as socio-demographic, clinical, and radiological features associated with it. The secondary objective was to determine the risk of mortality among hospitalized cases of hypoxic CAP. This prospective, observational study was conducted in four districts of Northern India, between January 2015 and April 2021. A hospital-based surveillance network was established. Inclusion criteria were as follows: (a) child between 2 and 59 months, (b) hospitalization with symptoms of WHO-defined CAP, (c) resident of project district, (d) illness of <14 days, and (e) child had neither been hospitalized for this illness nor recruited previously. Children whose chest x-rays (CXRs) were either unavailable/un-interpretable and those that received any dose of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine-13 were excluded. Hypoxic pneumonia was defined as oxygen saturation <90% on pulse oximetry or requiring oxygen supplementation during hospital stay. Results: During the study period, 71.9% (7,196/10,006) children of severe pneumonia were eligible for inclusion, of whom 35.9% (2,580/7,196) were having hypoxic pneumonia. Female gender and use of biomass fuel for cooking increased the odds of hypoxic CAP. Clinical factors like wheezing, pallor, tachypnea, low pulse volume, presence of comorbidity, general danger signs, severe malnutrition, and radiological finding of primary end-point pneumonia ± other infiltrates (PEP±OI) also increased the odds of hypoxic CAP in a conditional logistic regression model. Adjusted odds ratio for mortality with hypoxia was 2.36 (95% CI: 1.42–3.92). Conclusion: Almost one-third of cases hospitalized with severe CAP had hypoxia, which increased chances of mortality. Besides known danger signs, certain newer clinical signs such as pallor and wheezing as well as PEP+OI were associated with hypoxic CAP. Therefore, objective assessment of oxygen saturation must be done by pulse oximetry in all cases of CAP at the time of diagnosis. Copyright © 2022 Awasthi, Rastogi, Pandey, Roy, Mishra, Verma, Kumar, Jain, Yadav, Chauhan, Mohindra, Shukla, Agarwal, Pandey and Kohli.
dc.identifier.doi10.3389/fped.2021.790109
dc.identifier.issn22962360
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2021.790109
dc.identifier.urihttps://dl.bhu.ac.in/bhuir/handle/123456789/41757
dc.publisherFrontiers Media S.A.
dc.subjectchildren
dc.subjecthypoxic pneumonia
dc.subjectIndia
dc.subjectpallor
dc.subjectprimary end-point pneumonia
dc.titleEpidemiology of Hypoxic Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Children Under 5 Years of Age: An Observational Study in Northern India
dc.typePublication
dspace.entity.typeArticle

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