Bacteremia Antibiotic Length Actually Needed for Clinical Effectiveness: A Pilot RCT
NCT02261506 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 115
Last updated 2017-12-18
Summary
Bacteremia is a leading cause of mortality and morbidity in critically ill adults. Although bacteria in the bloodstream (bacteremia) may arise from variable infectious foci (most commonly central vascular catheter related, lung, urinary tract, intra-abdominal, or skin and soft tissue sources), because of the high attendant morbidity and mortality of bacteremia, these patients collectively represent a critically important group to study.
The consequences of the excessive antimicrobial use for individual patients, range from rash, gastrointestinal upset and diarrhea, to anaphylaxis, neutropenia, renal failure, toxic epidermal necrolysis, death, and a marked increase in ICU and hospital drug costs. One particularly concerning complication, Clostridium difficile infection, has increased in incidence and severity over the past decade. Much of this burden could be prevented through reduction in unnecessary antibiotic use.
Another major consequence of excessive antibiotic use is antimicrobial resistance. Antibiotic resistance is not only a concern for the patient who receives antibiotics, but also for neighbouring patients in the ICU, as well as future patients in the ICU and the hospital at large - through patient-to-patient transmission, and environmental contamination.
No previous randomized controlled trials have directly compared shorter versus longer durations of antimicrobial treatment in these patients. The investigators will conduct a multi-center randomized concealed allocation trial of shorter duration (7 days) versus longer duration (14 days) antibiotic treatment for critically ill patients with bacteremia admitted to ICU. Eligible, patients will be randomized to either 7 days or 14 days of adequate antimicrobial treatment. The selection of type, dose and route of antibiotics will be at the discretion of the treating physicians, but the duration of treatment (7 versus 14 days) will be determined by randomization group. The randomization assignment will not be communicated to the study research coordinator, study critical care or infectious diseases investigators or clinicians until day 8. The primary outcome for the main trial will be 90-day mortality.
The study will be initiated at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto, Ontario, and then rolled out to a second site at Kingston General Hospital in Kingston, Ontario. These sites will be sufficient to meet the sample size goals for the pilot RCT, but if additional funds are obtained the investigators will also roll out to the other Canadian ICUs listed below. The goal of adding these additional sites will be to increase the generalizability of the findings with respect to trial feasibility
Conditions
- Bacteremia
Interventions
- OTHER
-
7 days of adequate antibiotic treatment durations
We will not be randomizing patients to any specific antibiotic regimen. Patients will be randomized to fixed durations of adequate treatment: 7 versus 14 days. The selection of antibiotic(s) will be at the discretion of the treating team, although the research team will check to ensure that the selected antibiotics have an 'adequate' spectrum of coverage for the bacterial pathogen(s) isolated in the blood culture.
- OTHER
-
14 days of adequate antibiotic treatment durations
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Kingston Health Sciences Centre
collaborator OTHER -
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Nick Daneman, MD · Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Study Design
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Masking
- NONE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 18 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2014-10-16
- Primary Completion
- 2017-08-30
- Completion
- 2017-10-05
Countries
- Canada
Study Locations
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