Prognosis of clinical pneumonia in undernourished children in rural Gambia
Yasir Shitu Isa, Megan Carelus, Isabelle Silber, Rasheed Salaudeen, Golam Sarwar, Yekini Ajao Olatunji, Ilias Hossain, Isaac Osei, Galega Lobga, Banjo Adeshola, Ousman Barjo, Momodou M. Drammeh, Umberto D’Alessandro, Patricia L. Hibberd, Grant A. Mackenzie, Clarissa Valim

TL;DR
This study identifies early warning signs in undernourished children with pneumonia in rural Gambia to predict poor outcomes and guide timely interventions.
Contribution
The study develops accurate prognostic algorithms to identify undernourished children with pneumonia at risk of poor outcomes.
Findings
Prognostic algorithms achieved over 80% sensitivity and specificity in predicting poor outcomes.
Children with wasting and stunting showed distinct prognostic signatures for adverse outcomes.
Respiratory distress, hypoxemia, and feeding difficulties were key indicators of poor prognosis.
Abstract
Undernutrition significantly increases the risk of severe infections and mortality in children under five, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Pneumonia, a leading cause of childhood death, is especially dangerous in undernourished children, yet prognostic measures to identify those at highest risk are lacking. To identify algorithms of poor prognosis in undernourished children with clinical pneumonia for early identification of children at risk for poor outcomes. This study analyzed a subset of children enrolled in a cohort designed to identify biomarkers of bacterial pneumonia. Children aged 2–59 months with clinical pneumonia were recruited from two rural Gambian hospitals. Clinical and anthropometric data were collected at baseline, during hospitalization, and at 30-day follow-up. Nutritional status was classified using WHO definitions for stunting (height-for-age…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Nutrition and Water Access · Global Maternal and Child Health · Food Security and Health in Diverse Populations
