Background Respiratory infections like influenza and SARS-CoV-2 pose significant global health risks due to their high transmissibility and severity. SARS-CoV-2 has caused over 7 million deaths worldwide, and the Lancet Commission estimates a \>20% chance of a similar respiratory virus pandemic within a decade. Schools, often poorly ventilated, are high-risk settings for transmission. While COVID-19 school closures may have reduced transmission, they likely caused learning loss, mental health issues, and increased burdens on parents and caregivers. Air purifiers with HEPA filters may offer a non-disruptive mitigation strategy, but the evidence to support their effectiveness in reducing viral transmission is weak. This protocol describes a cluster-randomised, parallel, two-arm, group sequential superiority trial with an interim analysis-to allow early stopping for efficacy or futility-to estimate the effect of portable air purifiers with HEPA filters in primary school classrooms on student absenteeism. Research Questions The primary question is whether installing and operating air purifiers with HEPA-filters (intervention) reduce student absenteeism (primary outcome) compared to sham air purifiers (control). Secondary questions examine whether the intervention reduces teacher absenteeism due to respiratory infections, rate and 12-week risk of self-reported respiratory infections among teachers, and teachers' perceived air quality compared to sham air purifiers. If the trial estimates a statistically significant effect for the primary outcome, a cost-consequence analysis will evaluate the direct and indirect costs associating with operating air purifiers against the potential benefits of reduced student and teacher absenteeism. A process evaluation will explore mechanisms of effect. Methods and Analysis This group sequential trial will randomize schools (clusters) 1:1 to intervention or control arms in two stages: winter 2025/2026 (N = 32 schools; \~736 students) and winter 2026/2027 (N = 30 schools; \~690 students). Eligible schools must have classrooms suitable for portable air purifiers, \>10 students in grades 5-7 (typically aged 10-13 years), and principal consent. Intervention and control classrooms will each receive two portable air purifiers with HEPA-filters operating at a performance equivalent to 3.0 and 0.3 air changes per hour, respectively, with control purifiers acting as shams. Outcomes will be measured during and at the end of a 12-week period. The primary outcome is student absenteeism, measured as full child-days of absence aggregated at the class level. An interim analysis is planned at the end of the first stage, with error-spending O'Brien-Fleming stopping boundaries that are binding for efficacy and nonbinding for futility. The primary estimand is the marginal incidence rate ratio of student absences, estimated using generalized estimating equations with a negative binomial model to account for overdispersion. Prespecified stopping boundaries will determine stopping, with efficacy boundaries being binding. Treatment effects will be estimated using cluster-bootstrapped confidence intervals adjusted to provide strong control on overall type I and II error probabilities, and a bias correction will be applied if the trial is stopped early for efficacy. All analyses will follow the intention-to-treat principle. Ethics and Dissemination The trial has been approved by the Regional Committees for Medical and Health Research Ethics and the National Research Ethics Committee. Results will be disseminated to stakeholders, participants and the public through peer-reviewed journals, scientific meetings and social media.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
72
Air purifiers
Sham air purifiers
Norwegian Institute of Public Health
Oslo, Oslo County, Norway
Student absenteeism
The primary outcome is the number of student-days of absence per classroom, measured each week. The investigators will define a student day of absence as a day for which a student is absent for the entire day. The investigators will not distinguish between the specific students who are absent (i.e., two days of absence will be counted for one student who is absent on two days, and for two students absent for one day each).
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of intervention at 12 weeks
Self-reported absence due to respiratory infections among teachers
The investigators will measure the number of teacher-days of work absence (sick leave) due to self-reported respiratory infection each week. The investigators will ask teachers "Did you experience symptoms of a cold, COVID-19 or the flu last week?". Teachers who answer "Yes" to this question, will be asked to specify the symptoms they experienced (sneezing, nasal obstruction, nasal discharge, sore throath, cough, headache, fever or general discomfort) and rate each symptom from 0 to 3, where 0 = absent, 1 = mild, 2 = moderate, 3 = severe, in accordance with the Jackson index. They will then report the number of days they experienced these symptoms (ranging from 1 to 7 days), before answering "How many days were you absent from work last week due to respiratory infection?"; their response to this question will be used to measure number of days of absence. A count of zero days will be assigned to teachers answering "No" to the first question.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of intervention at 12 weeks
Incidence of self-reported respiratory symptoms consistent with respiratory infections among teachers
The investigators will assess incidents of respiratory symptoms consistent with respiratory infections among teachers using self-reported data collected weekly. The investigators define an incident as a period during which a teacher reports symptoms for at least two consecutive calendar days, preceded and followed by at least 7 symptom-free calendar days. The investigators define symptoms of respiratory infection as meeting all four of the following criteria: 1. Answering "yes" to the question "Did you experience symptoms of a cold, COVID-19 or the flu last week?". 2. Reporting at least one of the following symptoms: nasal obstruction (plugged or congested), nasal discharge (runny nose), sneezing or sore throat, in the last week; 3. Scoring at least four points on the Jackson scale (as assessed for the preceding week); 4. Reporting that they have experienced at least one of the reported symptoms for at least two consecutive days in the last week.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of the intervention at 12 weeks
Teachers reporting respiratory infections
The investigators will assess respiratory infection as a dichotomous outcome for each teacher, based on whether they meet the case definition at any point during the 12-week follow-up.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of the intervention at 12 weeks
Teacher perceptions of air quality in classrooms
The investigators will assess teachers' perceptions of classroom air quality at the end of follow-up using the MM040 questionnaire: teachers will report whether they have experienced drafts, high room temperature, low room temperature, fluctuating room temperature, stuffy or "bad" air, dry air, unpleasant odours, noise, or dust in the air during follow-up. The response options will be: "Yes, often (every week)," "Yes, occasionally," or "No, never".
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of the intervention at 12 weeks
Adverse events
The investigators define an adverse event as any significant disruption to lessons, or any accident or injury, that is attributable to the intervention or control. The investigators will instruct school principals and teachers to report such events.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of the intervention at 12 weeks
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