Pulmonary Function Testing in Pediatric Pneumonia Patients With Wheezing Younger Than 3 Years of Age

Glob Pediatr Health. 2019 Apr 9:6:2333794X19840357. doi: 10.1177/2333794X19840357. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Background. Wheezing symptoms are one of the risk factors in young pneumonia patients that often leads to asthma development. Infant pulmonary function test (iPFT) is potentially a useful tool to help identify and manage these high-risk pneumonia patients. Methods. To examine whether patients with wheezing symptoms are more likely to have poorer pulmonary function and treatment outcomes, and also to explore the clinical benefit of iPFT in young pneumonia patients, we conducted a retrospective analysis of 1005 pneumonia inpatients <3 years of age who had undergone iPFT testing in 2016 at Liuzhou Maternity and Child Healthcare Hospital in Guang-Xi, China. Results. We identified from the hospital database 505 pneumonia patients who presented with wheezing and 500 without wheezing. Univariate analysis showed that wheezing symptoms, viral infection, age <1 year, female gender, and prematurity were significantly associated with poorer iPFT results. After adjusting for confounders, patients with wheezing showed significantly poorer pulmonary function. Patients with wheezing had longer length of stay (7.9 ± 3.9 days vs 6.5 ± 2.6 days; P < .001) and lower percent with no residual clinical symptoms at discharge (58% vs 98%; P < .001) when compared with those of non-wheezing patients. In addition, 81% of patients with viral infection as compared with 43% of patients with nonviral infection presented with wheezing symptoms (P < .001). Conclusion. Wheezing symptoms were associated with poorer iPFT measures and treatment outcomes for pneumonia inpatients <3 years of age. Patients with wheezing had poorer treatment outcomes. iPFT can be useful in assessing and monitoring young patients with high risk of developing asthma or chronic lung disease later in life.

Keywords: asthma; chronic lung disease; infant pulmonary function test; pneumonia; viral infection; wheezing.