DESIGN: Post hoc analysis of a pragmatic, open-label, multicenter randomized controlled trial.
SETTING: Fifteen PICUs across the United Kingdom and Scotland.
PATIENTS: Children aged 38 weeks corrected gestational age to 15 years accepted to a participating PICU as an unplanned admission and receiving invasive mechanical ventilation with supplemental oxygen for abnormal gas exchange.
METHODS: Hierarchical regression models for Spo2 and Fio2, and ordinal models for the primary trial outcome of a composite of the duration of organ support at 30 days and death, were used to examine the effects of ethnicity, accounting for baseline Spo2, Fio2, and mean airway pressure and trial allocation.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Ethnicity data were available for 1577 of 1986 eligible children, 1408 (89.3%) of which were White, Asian, or Black. Spo2 and Fio2 distributions did not vary according to Black or Asian ethnicity compared with White children. The trial primary outcome measure also did not vary significantly with ethnicity. The point estimate for the treatment effect of conservative oxygenation in Black children was 0.64 (95% CI, 0.33-1.25) compared with 0.84 (0.68-1.04) in the overall trial population.
CONCLUSIONS: These data do not suggest that the association between improved outcomes and conservative oxygenation strategy in mechanically ventilated children in PICU is modified by ethnicity.