Identifying prognostic factors of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia in African children with severe falciparum malaria: a secondary analysis of a randomized trial

<br><strong>Background<br></strong> Severe metabolic acidosis and acute kidney injury are major causes of mortality in children with severe malaria but are often underdiagnosed in low resource settings. <br><strong> Methods<br></strong> A retrospective...

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Main Authors: Mzumara, G, Leopold, S, Marsh, K, Dondorp, A, Ohuma, EO, Mukaka, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central 2021
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author Mzumara, G
Leopold, S
Marsh, K
Dondorp, A
Ohuma, EO
Mukaka, M
author_facet Mzumara, G
Leopold, S
Marsh, K
Dondorp, A
Ohuma, EO
Mukaka, M
author_sort Mzumara, G
collection OXFORD
description <br><strong>Background<br></strong> Severe metabolic acidosis and acute kidney injury are major causes of mortality in children with severe malaria but are often underdiagnosed in low resource settings. <br><strong> Methods<br></strong> A retrospective analysis of the ‘Artesunate versus quinine in the treatment of severe falciparum malaria in African children’ (AQUAMAT) trial was conducted to identify clinical features of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia in 5425 children from nine African countries. Separate models were fitted for uraemia and severe metabolic acidosis. Separate univariable and multivariable logistic regression were performed to identify prognostic factors for severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia. Both analyses adjusted for the trial arm. A forward selection approach was used for model building of the logistic models and a threshold of 5% statistical significance was used for inclusion of variables into the final logistic model. Model performance was assessed through calibration, discrimination, and internal validation with bootstrapping. <br><strong> Results<br></strong> There were 2296 children identified with severe metabolic acidosis and 1110 with uraemia. Prognostic features of severe metabolic acidosis among them were deep breathing (OR: 3.94, CI 2.51–6.2), hypoglycaemia (OR: 5.16, CI 2.74–9.75), coma (OR: 1.72 CI 1.17–2.51), respiratory distress (OR: 1.46, CI 1.02–2.1) and prostration (OR: 1.88 CI 1.35–2.59). Features associated with uraemia were coma (3.18, CI 2.36–4.27), Prostration (OR: 1.78 CI 1.37–2.30), decompensated shock (OR: 1.89, CI 1.31–2.74), black water fever (CI 1.58. CI 1.09–2.27), jaundice (OR: 3.46 CI 2.21–5.43), severe anaemia (OR: 1.77, CI 1.36–2.29) and hypoglycaemia (OR: 2.77, CI 2.22–3.46) <br><strong> Conclusion<br></strong> Clinical and laboratory parameters representing contributors and consequences of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia were independently associated with these outcomes. The model can be useful for identifying patients at high risk of these complications where laboratory assessments are not routinely available.
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spelling oxford-uuid:26b72c52-47e0-4c67-b424-0d687737e5922022-03-26T12:02:42ZIdentifying prognostic factors of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia in African children with severe falciparum malaria: a secondary analysis of a randomized trialJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:26b72c52-47e0-4c67-b424-0d687737e592EnglishSymplectic ElementsBioMed Central2021Mzumara, GLeopold, SMarsh, KDondorp, AOhuma, EOMukaka, M<br><strong>Background<br></strong> Severe metabolic acidosis and acute kidney injury are major causes of mortality in children with severe malaria but are often underdiagnosed in low resource settings. <br><strong> Methods<br></strong> A retrospective analysis of the ‘Artesunate versus quinine in the treatment of severe falciparum malaria in African children’ (AQUAMAT) trial was conducted to identify clinical features of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia in 5425 children from nine African countries. Separate models were fitted for uraemia and severe metabolic acidosis. Separate univariable and multivariable logistic regression were performed to identify prognostic factors for severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia. Both analyses adjusted for the trial arm. A forward selection approach was used for model building of the logistic models and a threshold of 5% statistical significance was used for inclusion of variables into the final logistic model. Model performance was assessed through calibration, discrimination, and internal validation with bootstrapping. <br><strong> Results<br></strong> There were 2296 children identified with severe metabolic acidosis and 1110 with uraemia. Prognostic features of severe metabolic acidosis among them were deep breathing (OR: 3.94, CI 2.51–6.2), hypoglycaemia (OR: 5.16, CI 2.74–9.75), coma (OR: 1.72 CI 1.17–2.51), respiratory distress (OR: 1.46, CI 1.02–2.1) and prostration (OR: 1.88 CI 1.35–2.59). Features associated with uraemia were coma (3.18, CI 2.36–4.27), Prostration (OR: 1.78 CI 1.37–2.30), decompensated shock (OR: 1.89, CI 1.31–2.74), black water fever (CI 1.58. CI 1.09–2.27), jaundice (OR: 3.46 CI 2.21–5.43), severe anaemia (OR: 1.77, CI 1.36–2.29) and hypoglycaemia (OR: 2.77, CI 2.22–3.46) <br><strong> Conclusion<br></strong> Clinical and laboratory parameters representing contributors and consequences of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia were independently associated with these outcomes. The model can be useful for identifying patients at high risk of these complications where laboratory assessments are not routinely available.
spellingShingle Mzumara, G
Leopold, S
Marsh, K
Dondorp, A
Ohuma, EO
Mukaka, M
Identifying prognostic factors of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia in African children with severe falciparum malaria: a secondary analysis of a randomized trial
title Identifying prognostic factors of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia in African children with severe falciparum malaria: a secondary analysis of a randomized trial
title_full Identifying prognostic factors of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia in African children with severe falciparum malaria: a secondary analysis of a randomized trial
title_fullStr Identifying prognostic factors of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia in African children with severe falciparum malaria: a secondary analysis of a randomized trial
title_full_unstemmed Identifying prognostic factors of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia in African children with severe falciparum malaria: a secondary analysis of a randomized trial
title_short Identifying prognostic factors of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia in African children with severe falciparum malaria: a secondary analysis of a randomized trial
title_sort identifying prognostic factors of severe metabolic acidosis and uraemia in african children with severe falciparum malaria a secondary analysis of a randomized trial
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