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European Respiratory Society statement for defining respiratory exacerbations in children and adolescents with bronchiectasis for clinical trials

Chang, AB; Zacharasiewicz, A; Goyal, V; Boyd, J; Alexopoulou, E; Aliberti, S; Bell, L; Bush, A; Claydon, A; Constant, C; et al. Chang, AB; Zacharasiewicz, A; Goyal, V; Boyd, J; Alexopoulou, E; Aliberti, S; Bell, L; Bush, A; Claydon, A; Constant, C; Fortescue, R; Hill, AT; Karadag, B; Powell, Z; Wilson, C; Grimwood, K; Kantar, A; other members of Child-BEAR-Net (2022) European Respiratory Society statement for defining respiratory exacerbations in children and adolescents with bronchiectasis for clinical trials. Eur Respir J, 60 (5). ISSN 1399-3003 https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.00300-2022
SGUL Authors: Normansell, Rebecca Alice

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Abstract

Bronchiectasis is being diagnosed increasingly in children and adolescents. Recurrent respiratory exacerbations are common in children and adolescents with this chronic pulmonary disorder. Respiratory exacerbations are associated with an impaired quality of life, poorer long-term clinical outcomes, and substantial costs to the family and health systems. The 2021 European Respiratory Society (ERS) clinical practice guideline for the management of children and adolescents with bronchiectasis provided a definition of acute respiratory exacerbations for clinical use but to date there is no comparable universal definition for clinical research. Given the importance of exacerbations in the field, this ERS Task Force sought to obtain robust definitions of respiratory exacerbations for clinical research. The panel was a multidisciplinary team of specialists in paediatric and adult respiratory medicine, infectious disease, physiotherapy, primary care, nursing, radiology, methodology, patient advocacy, and parents of children and adolescents with bronchiectasis. We used a standardised process that included a systematic literature review, parent survey, and a Delphi approach involving 299 physicians (54 countries) caring for children and adolescents with bronchiectasis. Consensus was obtained for all four statements drafted by the panel as the disagreement rate was very low (range 3.6–7.2%). The panel unanimously endorsed the four consensus definitions for 1a) non-severe exacerbation and 1b) severe exacerbation as an outcome measure, 2) non-severe exacerbation for studies initiating treatment, and 3) resolution of a non-severe exacerbation for clinical trials involving children and adolescents with bronchiectasis. This ERS Task Force proposes using these internationally derived, consensus-based definitions of respiratory exacerbations for future clinical paediatric bronchiectasis research.

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: other members of Child-BEAR-Net, 11 Medical and Health Sciences, Respiratory System
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
3 November 2022Published
21 June 2022Published Online
4 April 2022Accepted
Publisher License: Publisher's own licence
PubMed ID: 35728974
Go to PubMed abstract
URI: https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/114721
Publisher's version: https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.00300-2022

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