Professor Simon Craig |
Monash Health Paediatric Emergency
Physician and Monash University Adjunct Clinical Associate Professor Dr Simon
Craig is one of a team of chief investigators who were awarded NHMRC funding to
undertake a new multi-centre study on the use of nasal high-flow oxygen for
children with acute respiratory illnesses.
Acute hypoxic respiratory failure is
one of the most common reasons children are admitted to hospital, and leads to
hundreds of intensive care admissions each year.
Associate Professor Craig and colleagues
recently published a randomised multi-centre trial of nasal high-flow oxygen in
over 1400 infants with bronchiolitis in the New England Journal of Medicine. This
study showed reduced treatment escalation in the high-flow group, but no
difference in any other outcomes such as hospital length of stay or ICU
admission. The new study will apply similar methods to children older than 12
months with hypoxic respiratory failure of any cause.
“High-flow nasal oxygen (HFNO) therapy
has been rapidly adopted in acute paediatric care. However, we are still trying
to identify whether or not it has any impact on patient-centred outcomes,” Dr
Craig said.
“Studies of HFNO appear to show
short-term benefits relating to work of breathing. However, it is yet to be
shown whether or not adoption of this technology improves outcomes important to
patients and families, such as hospital length of stay.”
The grant, for over $2 million, will
allow the study to be conducted at multiple centres across Australia and New
Zealand, including Monash Children’s Hospital. It builds on previous successful
multi centre research conducted by the Paediatric Research in Emergency
Departments International Collaborative (PREDICT) network, and the Paediatric
Critical Care Research Group.
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