In France, over 2.5 million people suffer from asthma, including one-third of children. This is the chronic respiratory disease leading to the highest rate of hospitalization. The conventional oxygen delivery means in children are the non-rebreather face mask or low flow nasal cannula (standard oxygen therapy - SOT). New non-invasive ventilatory support systems such as High Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC) are emerging. These are nasal cannulas allowing the delivery of a high air (or oxygen) flow, exceeding the inspiratory flow of patients with acute respiratory failure, allowing to deliver a slight positive expiratory pressure while ensuring humidification and warming of the airways. Aerosol administration is also possible with excellent efficiency and without interrupting respiratory assistance. Physiological data and clinical studies in other pathologies suggest the interest of this technique during the asthma attack, but no comparative study currently exists in this indication. The HFNCs could have their place upstream of Non Invasive Ventilation (NIV), thus replacing non-rebreather face mask sometimes not tolerated by the children. The investigators's hypothesis is that HFNCs could improve patients' health faster, reduce the use of other ventilatory assistance (NIV, invasive ventilation) and reduce the duration of hospitalization in intensive care units or continuous monitoring units (CMU).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
272
Oxygen therapy will be delivered through high flow nasal cannulas. Aerosol treatments will be administered through a vibrating mesh nebulizer directly connected to the circuit (aerogen®). The airvo® system (Fisher \& Peykel Healthcare, Auckland, New Zealand) will be used as the high flow cannula system in the study. Cannula size will be tailored to the child according to the manufacturer's recommendations. The gas flow will be adjusted according to the child's weight in a predefined chart. FiO2 will be adjusted to allow for a SpO2 \>92%. All the patients, regardless of their treatment failure status, will be evaluated at H2, H6, H12 and H24 to monitor their evolution (evaluation of the standard parameters, consciousness, PRAM (Pediatric Respiratory Assessment Measure) score, pain assessment by the FLACC (Face Legs Activity Cry Consolability) score). .
Children will receive supplemental oxygen as commonly delivered through a non-rebreather face mask or low flow nasal cannula (standard oxygen treatment) and beta2 agonist aerosol via vibrating mesh nebulizer (aerogen®) according to the procedures usually used in the unit and according to the GINA (Global Initiative for Asthma) protocol. This group is the standard treatment group and is therefore the control group. All the patients, regardless of their treatment failure status, will be evaluated at H2, H6, H12 and H24 to monitor their evolution (evaluation of the standard parameters, consciousness, PRAM score, pain assessment by the FLACC score). The use of adjuvant therapies (magnesium sulfate, salbutamol IVSE, and ipratropium bromide) will remain at the discretion of the physician in charge of the child and will be evaluated as a secondary criterion.
Hôpital Femme-Mère-Enfant
Bron, France
CHU de Dijon
Dijon, France
CHU de Grenoble Alpes
Grenoble, France
Hôpital Bicêtre
Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France
Hôpital Timone 2
Marseille, France
CH Annecy Genevois
Metz-Tessy, France
CHU Arnaud de Villeneuve
Montpellier, France
CHU de Nantes
Nantes, France
Chu Lenval
Nice, France
Hôpital Armand Trousseau
Paris, France
...and 4 more locations
Number of patients with first line treatment Failure as defined below in the first 24 hours
First line treatment Failure in the first 24 hours is defined as: * Occurrence or worsening of hypercapnic acidosis (pH\<7.35 with pCO2\>45 mmHg) * Or worsening of PRAM score (\>=2 from baseline) * Or SpO2\<92% with maximal flow of oxygen depending on age in the group standard oxygen therapy or with FiO2 \> 60% associated with a flow between 1 and 3L/Kg/min in the HFNC group * Or occurrence or worsening of the level of consciousness with Glasgow coma scale \< 12 * Or the need of invasive or noninvasive ventilation (Glasgow coma scale\<8, hemodynamic instability, refractory hypoxemia) at any time during the first 24 hours
Time frame: up to hour 24
Number of Patients requiring noninvasive ventilation (NIV)
Time frame: month 1
Number of Patients requiring invasive ventilation (IV).
Time frame: month 1
Duration of invasive ventilation (IV).
Duration in hours
Time frame: month 1
Duration of noninvasive ventilation (NIV)
Duration in hours
Time frame: month 1
Comfort assessed by the FLACC score
Time frame: up to hour 24
Duration of supplemental oxygen therapy (in hours)
Time frame: month 1
Time from inclusion to restoration of a PRAM score < 8 (in hours).
Time frame: month 1
Time from inclusion to blood gas normalization (pCO2<45 mmHg and pH>7.35) if available (hours)
Time frame: month 1
Cumulative dose of treatments (salbutamol, corticosteroid magnesium sulfate)
in milligram during PICU stay
Time frame: month 1
total number of hours of PICU stay
Time frame: month 1
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