Optimal Antibiotic Treatment of Moderate to Severe Bacterial Infections
CDSS
1 other identifier
interventional
600
1 country
1
Brief Summary
Severe bacterial infections are associated with mortality of about 30%. Patients with moderate to severe bacterial infections given early and appropriate empirical antibiotic treatment are at a lesser risk for a fatal outcome, with odds ratios ranging from 1.6 to 6.9. However only about 2/3 of patients worldwide are given early and appropriate empirical antibiotic treatment. About 40% of patients treated with antibiotics are given superfluous treatment. TREAT is a computerized decision support system for antibiotic treatment in inpatients with common bacterial infections. TREAT is based on a state of the art stochastic model of the domain (a causal probabilistic network) and uses a cost benefit model for antibiotic treatment, including costs assigned to future resistance. It was tested in a randomized controlled trial in 3 countries and shown to improve the percentage of appropriate empirical antibiotic treatment while at the same time reduce hospital stay and the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics. The main limitation of TREAT is inherent in the limited information available within hours of presentation. A second attractive approach to improve antibiotic treatment is to use techniques that do not depend on cultures, and thus shorten the time to identification of the pathogen to a few hours only. The LightCycler® SeptiFast test from Roche performs in vitro nucleic acid amplification test for pathogens causing bloodstream infections. The purpose of the clinical trial is to show that the combined system TREAT/PCR assays will improve the outcome of inpatients with moderate to severe bacterial infections, while at the same time reducing the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics, with no or little additional costs. A secondary objective will be to assess the sensitivity and specificity of whole blood PCR, using TREAT as the reference standard.
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach
participants targeted
Target at P75+ for not_applicable
Started Apr 2016
Typical duration for not_applicable
1 active site
Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.
Trial Relationships
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Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
First Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
March 30, 2011
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
April 19, 2011
CompletedStudy Start
First participant enrolled
April 1, 2016
CompletedPrimary Completion
Last participant's last visit for primary outcome
May 13, 2019
CompletedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
May 13, 2019
CompletedApril 9, 2024
April 1, 2024
3.1 years
March 30, 2011
April 7, 2024
Conditions
Keywords
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (1)
Clinical success defined as 30-day survival and clinical stability on day 4
patient alive at day 30; on day 4: no fever, no intra-tracheal tube, hemodynamic stable, no vasopressor support, empirical treatment appropriate (and thus not changed).
30 days
Secondary Outcomes (6)
Appropriate empirical antibiotic treatment
48 hours
Survival
30 days
Hospital stay
30 days
Antibiotic miuse of broad spectrum antibiotics and total costs of antibiotic treatment Superfluous antibiotic treatment
30 days
Costs
30 days
- +1 more secondary outcomes
Study Arms (2)
Management by TREAT/PCR
EXPERIMENTALThe data available at the time of patient recruitment will be entered into TREAT. TREAT will provide advice for the empirical antibiotic treatment and unless the caring physician can justify a deviation from this recommendation, TREAT's recommendation will be implemented (yes or no antibiotic treatment and type of antibiotic). TREAT will also recommend whether a blood sample for PCR should be obtained. Blood will be collected aseptically and the test will be performed once daily between 1000AM-1700PM (results available daily at 1700 PM). PCR results and a PCR-revised TREAT recommendation will be reported to the patient's physician in charge and treatment will be revised accordingly.
Usual management
NO INTERVENTIONPatients will be managed by physicians as in regular clinical practice.
Interventions
Management by TREAT/PCR. The data available at the time of patient recruitment will be entered into TREAT. TREAT will provide advice for the empirical antibiotic treatment and unless the caring physician can justify a deviation from this recommendation, TREAT's recommendation will be implemented (yes or no antibiotic treatment and type of antibiotic). TREAT will also recommend whether a blood sample for PCR should be obtained. Blood will be collected aseptically and the test will be performed once daily between 1000AM-1700PM (results available daily at 1700 PM). PCR results and a PCR-revised TREAT recommendation will be reported to the patient's physician in charge and treatment will be revised accordingly. On day 2, when results of blood cultures and other cultures become available TREAT will be re-consulted and will issue a new recommendation based on the full microbiological investigation (negative and positive results).
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if:
- The rationale of the study will be to address patients for whom antibiotic treatment is, or should be, considered. Thus we will include consecutive patients detected in medical departments according to the following criteria:
- Patients from whom blood cultures were drawn or
- All patients for whom antibiotic treatment (but not prophylaxis or intra-peritoneal, inhalation or local antibiotics therapy ) is started within the last 96 days or
- Patients fulfilling the CDC diagnostic criteria for any infection (see appendix C) or
- Patients with temperature ≥38.3 measured orally (or 38 axillary or 38.5 rectal) on a single measurement or ≥38 / \< 36 on at least 2 consecutive measurements separated at least 1 hr apart and one of the next criteria:
- (a) heart rate \>90 beats/minute; (b) respiratory rate \>20 breaths/minute or partial pressure of CO2 \<32 mm Hg; and (c) white blood cell count \>12,000/ L, \<4000 L, or \>10% immature (band) forms. or
- Patients with shock compatible with septic shock. As defined as hypotension (arterial blood pressure \<90 mmHg systolic, or 40 mmHg less than patient's normal blood pressure) for at least 1 h despite adequate fluid resuscitation; Or Need for vasopressors to maintain systolic blood pressure \>90 mmHg or mean arterial pressure \>70 mmHg and a suspected source of infection.
You may not qualify if:
- HIV positive patients with opportunistic infection (suspected or proven)and / or AIDS defining illness in the last 6 months prior to data collection.
- Children\<18 years.
- Suspected travel infections.
- Suspected tuberculosis.
- Pregnancy.
- We will exclude patients not able to sign informed consent or not having a legal guardian willing to do so.
Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.
Sponsors & Collaborators
Study Sites (1)
Rabin Medical Center, Beilinson Hospital
Petah Tikvah, 49100, Israel
MeSH Terms
Conditions
Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Study Officials
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
Mical Paul, MD
Rabin Medical Center
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
Leonard Leibovici, Prof
Rabin Medical Center
Study Design
- Study Type
- interventional
- Phase
- not applicable
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Masking
- NONE
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Intervention Model
- PARALLEL
- Sponsor Type
- OTHER
- Responsible Party
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
- PI Title
- Professor
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
March 30, 2011
First Posted
April 19, 2011
Study Start
April 1, 2016
Primary Completion
May 13, 2019
Study Completion
May 13, 2019
Last Updated
April 9, 2024
Record last verified: 2024-04