Conference Coverage

Hypertonic saline for bronchiolitis found ineffective in large RCT study


 

AT ESPID 2017

– Giving nebulized hypertonic saline (NHS) to infants who present to pediatric emergency departments with a first episode of moderate to severe acute bronchiolitis did not reduce their hospitalization rate in the randomized, multicenter, double-blind GUERANDE trial.

Moreover, mild adverse events – mainly worsening cough – were significantly more frequent in the NHS recipients than in controls given nebulized normal saline, Christele Gras-le Guen, MD, reported at the annual meeting of the European Society for Paediatric Infectious Diseases.

Doctor with baby and nebulizer ©iStock/Thinkstock.com
“The use of hypertonic saline for infants with a first episode of acute bronchiolitis in the pediatric emergency department cannot be recommended,” declared Dr. Gras-le Guen of University Hospital in Nantes, France.

Some previous studies have suggested a modest benefit, but they were underpowered to draw meaningful conclusions. GUERANDE, a 777-patient randomized trial conducted in 24 French pediatric emergency departments, was the first quality study large enough to determine whether the therapy results in fewer hospital admissions, she said.

In GUERANDE, infants with a first episode of acute bronchiolitis were given two 20-minute nebulizations of 3% hypertonic saline or 0.9% normal saline 20 minutes apart.

The primary outcome was the rate of hospital admission within 24 hours after enrollment. The rate was 48% in the NHS group and 52% in controls, a nonsignificant difference which shrunk even more after controlling for age, oxygen saturation, and respiratory syncytial virus infection status.

No serious adverse events occurred in GUERANDE. However, the rate of mild adverse events was 9% in the NHS group, significantly higher than the 4% rate in controls. Notably, cough without respiratory distress occurred 30 times in 26 infants in the NHS group, compared with 4 times in 3 control subjects.

Dr. Gras-le Guin reported having no financial conflicts regarding the GUERANDE study, funded by the French Health Ministry.

Recommended Reading

Investigational flu vaccine finds way around pyrogenicity problem
MDedge Family Medicine
Earlier childhood measles vaccination elevates the risk of vaccine failure
MDedge Family Medicine
Whole blood PCR improves diagnosis of pediatric bacterial sepsis
MDedge Family Medicine
Hexavalent DTaP5-IPV-HB-Hib is immunogenic in series with pentavalent vaccine
MDedge Family Medicine
Prophylaxis prevents PCP in rheumatic disease patients
MDedge Family Medicine
All isn’t well with HIV-exposed uninfected infants
MDedge Family Medicine
Vaccine delivery costs challenge physicians
MDedge Family Medicine
Monoclonal antibody holds promise for S. aureus pneumonia
MDedge Family Medicine
Cancer, heart disease increase MRSA mortality
MDedge Family Medicine
Measles immunization is a major challenge in HIV-infected children
MDedge Family Medicine

Related Articles