Protracted Bacterial Bronchitis In Children
- Is an infective cause of chronic wet cough lasting longer than 4 weeks in children.
- Occurs in <5 years of age
- If the child has a dry cough, this excludes the diagnosis of protracted bacterial bronchitis.
- Evidence suggests that PBB may be a common enough condition to warrant its inclusion in national and international cough guidelines.
- The hallmarks of PBB are
- prolonged moist or productive cough
- lasts >4 weeks
- response to antibiotics.
- the key distinguishing feature of PBB is usually an absence of waxing and waning coryzal symptoms with improvement to dry cough.
- If left untreated, children with PBB continue to have wet cough for months or years.
- Wheeze is documented in 50–75% of these children
- the diagnosis has a high degree of overlap with other wheezing conditions including asthma, tracheomalacia and bronchomalacia.
- rarely evolves into pneumonia, but concern exists that in the long term, if left untreated, bronchiectasis may develop
- Bronchoscopy is no longer considered necessary, because of its semi-invasive nature, and usually one or two courses (2–6 week) of antibiotics (usually amoxicillin/clavulanic acid), are curative
- Evidence of antibiotic efficacy with symptom dissipation usually occurs within 2 weeks but continuation of antibiotics for a further 4 weeks is thought to be required to allow for airways healing if symptoms have been prolonged.
- Despite initial resolution, later recurrence and need for repeat treatment is required in the majority of patients.
Symptoms: Cough
-
- Present for longer than 4 weeks
- Cough is an isolated symptom and the child is otherwise well
- Wet or moist in nature,
- ‘rattly’ sound often present on chest examination
- The cough is present day and night
- Worsens when changing posture
- Coughing episodes can cause shortness of breath but shortness of breath is not present at other times.
Causes
- Haemophilus influenzae
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Moraxella catarrhalis.
Differentials
- Asthma—consider if wheeze, shortness of breath and night cough are present
- Environmental exposure to cigarette smoke—smoke is a significant trigger for cough.
- Postviral cough—following an acute viral respiratory tract infection, such as acute rhinosinusitis or acute bronchitis, cough may last up to 8 weeks
- Upper airway cough syndrome (previously called postnasal drip)—consider if the child has acute rhinitis
- Retained inhaled foreign body—if the cough was sudden in onset, particularly if cough started while the child was eating or playing with small objects
- Infections
- Pertussis (whooping cough)
- Lung abscess
- Tuberculosis
- Congenital airway abnormalities
- Tracheomalacia
- Vascular ring
- Chronic lung disease (eg bronchiectasis)—consider if clubbing of the fingers, chest wall deformity or abnormal growth or development are observed.
- See cough in adults or cough in children for an overview of diagnosis and general
Treatment:
- Amoxicillin+ Clavulanate (child 2 months or older) 22.5+3.2 mg/kg up to 875+125 mg orally, 12-hourly for 2 weeks Or
- Cefuroxime (child 3 months or older) 15 mg/kg up to 500 mg orally, 12-hourly for 2 weeks Or
- Trimethoprim+sulfamethoxazole (child 1 month or older) 5+25 mg/kg up to 160+800 mg orally, 12-hourly for 2 weeks
- Duration of therapy :
- Continue antibiotic therapy for the full 2-week course because symptoms often return if the course is shortened. If the cough does not resolve within 2 weeks, extend antibiotic therapy for a further 2 weeks (4 weeks total duration of therapy).
- If the cough does not resolve after 4 weeks of antibiotic treatment, or if the child has frequent recurrences of cough, refer the child to a paediatrician or paediatric respiratory specialist to exclude other causes of chronic cough such as bronchiectasis