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European Respiratory Society guidelines for the management of children and adolescents with bronchiectasis

Chang, AB; Fortescue, R; Grimwood, K; Alexopoulou, E; Bell, L; Boyd, J; Bush, A; Chalmers, JD; Hill, AT; Karadag, B; et al. Chang, AB; Fortescue, R; Grimwood, K; Alexopoulou, E; Bell, L; Boyd, J; Bush, A; Chalmers, JD; Hill, AT; Karadag, B; Midulla, F; McCallum, GB; Powell, Z; Snijders, D; Song, W-J; Tonia, T; Wilson, C; Zacharasiewicz, A; Kantar, A (2021) European Respiratory Society guidelines for the management of children and adolescents with bronchiectasis. Eur Respir J, 58 (2). p. 2002990. ISSN 1399-3003 https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.02990-2020
SGUL Authors: Normansell, Rebecca Alice

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Abstract

There is increasing awareness of bronchiectasis in children and adolescents, a chronic pulmonary disorder associated with poor quality-of-life for the child/adolescent and their parents, recurrent exacerbations and costs to the family and health systems. Optimal treatment improves clinical outcomes. Several national guidelines exist, but there are no international guidelines.The European Respiratory Society (ERS) Task Force for the management of paediatric bronchiectasis sought to identify evidence-based management (investigation and treatment) strategies. It used the ERS standardised process that included a systematic review of the literature and application of the GRADE approach to define the quality of the evidence and level of recommendations.A multidisciplinary team of specialists in paediatric and adult respiratory medicine, infectious disease, physiotherapy, primary care, nursing, radiology, immunology, methodology, patient advocacy and parents of children/adolescents with bronchiectasis considered the most relevant clinical questions (for both clinicians and patients) related to managing paediatric bronchiectasis. Fourteen key clinical questions (7 "Patient, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome" [PICO] and 7 narrative) were generated. The outcomes for each PICO were decided by voting by the panel and parent advisory group.This guideline addresses the definition, diagnostic approach and antibiotic treatment of exacerbations, pathogen eradication, long-term antibiotic therapy, asthma-type therapies (inhaled corticosteroids, bronchodilators), mucoactive drugs, airway clearance, investigation of underlying causes of bronchiectasis, disease monitoring, factors to consider before surgical treatment and the reversibility and prevention of bronchiectasis in children/adolescents. Benchmarking quality of care for children/adolescents with bronchiectasis to improve clinical outcomes and evidence gaps for future research could be based on these recommendations.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: This is an author-submitted, peer-reviewed version of a manuscript that has been accepted for publication in the European Respiratory Journal, prior to copy-editing, formatting and typesetting. This version of the manuscript may not be duplicated or reproduced without prior permission from the European Respiratory Society. The publisher is not responsible or liable for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or in any version derived from it by any other parties. The final, copy-edited, published article, which is the version of record, is available without a subscription 18 months after the date of issue publication.
Keywords: Respiratory System, 11 Medical and Health Sciences
SGUL Research Institute / Research Centre: Academic Structure > Population Health Research Institute (INPH)
Journal or Publication Title: Eur Respir J
ISSN: 1399-3003
Language: eng
Dates:
DateEvent
1 August 2021Published
11 February 2021Published Online
4 February 2021Published Online
21 December 2020Accepted
Publisher License: Publisher's own licence
PubMed ID: 33542057
Go to PubMed abstract
URI: https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/112974
Publisher's version: https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.02990-2020

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