Bloodstream Infections Clinical Trial
— MERINO IIOfficial title:
Pilot RCT of Meropenem Versus Piperacillin-Tazobactam for Definitive Treatment of Bloodstream Infections Caused by AmpC Beta-lactamase Producing Enterobacter Spp., Citrobacter Freundii, Morganella Morganii, Providencia Spp. or Serratia Marcescens. in Low-risk Patients
Verified date | May 2023 |
Source | The University of Queensland |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Infections of the blood are extremely serious and require intravenous antibiotic treatment. When the infection results from antibiotic resistant bacteria, the choice of antibiotic is an extremely important decision. Some types of bacteria produce enzymes that may inactivate essential antibiotics, related to penicillin, called 'beta-lactams'. Furthermore high level production of these enzymes can occur during therapy and lead to clinical failure, even when an antibiotic appears effective by laboratory testing. However, this risk of this occurring in clinical practice has only been well described in a limited range of antibiotic classes in a type of bacteria called Enterobacter. There is currently uncertainty as to whether a commonly used, and highly effective antibiotic, called piperacillin-tazobactam is subject to the same risk of resistance developing while on treatment. Infections caused by Enterobacter (and other bacteria with similar resistance mechanisms) are often treated with an alternative drug called meropenem (a carbapenem antibiotic), which is effective but has an extremely broad-spectrum of activity. Excessive use of carbapenems is driving further resistance to this antibiotic class - which represent our 'lastline' of antibiotic defence. As such, we need studies to help us see whether alternatives to meropenem are an effective and safe choice. No study has ever directly tested whether these two antibiotics have the same effectiveness for this type of infection. The purpose of this study is to randomly assign patients with blood infection caused by Enterobacter or related bacteria to either meropenem or piperacillin/tazobactam in order to test whether these antibiotics have similar effectiveness.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 100 |
Est. completion date | December 31, 2020 |
Est. primary completion date | December 31, 2020 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Bloodstream infection with Enterobacter spp., Serratia marcescens, Providencia spp., Morganella morganii or Citrobacter freundii (i.e. likely AmpC-producer), and susceptibility to 3rd generation cephalosporins (i.e. ceftriaxone, cefotaxime or ceftazidime), meropenem and piperacillin-tazobactam from at least one blood culture draw. This will be determined in accordance with laboratory methods and susceptibility breakpoints defined by protocols used in the recruiting site laboratories.. - No more than 72 hours has elapsed since the first positive blood culture collection. - Patient is aged 18 years and over (>=21y in Singapore). Exclusion Criteria: 1. Patient not expected to survive more than 4 days 2. Patient allergic to a penicillin or a carbapenem 3. Patient with significant polymicrobial bacteraemia (that is, a Gram positive skin contaminant in one set of blood cultures is not regarded as significant polymicrobial bacteraemia). 4. Treatment is not with the intent to cure the infection (that is, palliative care is an exclusion). 5. Pregnancy or breast-feeding. 6. Use of concomitant antimicrobials in the first 4 days after enrolment with known activity against Gram-negative bacilli (except trimethoprim/sulphamethoxazole may be continued as Pneumocystis prophylaxis). 7. Severe acute illness as defined by Pitt bacteraemia score of >4 8. Likely source to be from (proven or suspected at the time of randomisation) the central nervous system, e.g. brain abscess, post-surgical meningitis, shunt infection (due to concerns over CNS penetration of piperacillin/tazobactam) |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Australia | Princess Alexandra Hospital | Brisbane | Queensland |
Australia | Royal Brisbane Hospital | Brisbane | Queensland |
Australia | John Hunter Hospital | New Lambton | New South Wales |
Australia | Wollongong Hospital | Wollongong | New South Wales |
Singapore | National University Hospital Singapore | Singapore | |
Singapore | Tan Tock Seng Hospital | Singapore |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
The University of Queensland |
Australia, Singapore,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Clinical and microbiological outcomes post bloodstream infection of patients treated with piperacillin/tazobactam and meropenem. | Composite end-point of:
Death: up to 30 days post randomisation. Clinical failure - defined as ongoing fever (Tmax >=38.0oC) OR leucocytosis (white blood cell count >12x109/L) - assessed on day 5 post randomisation. Microbiological failure - defined as positive blood culture or any sterile site specimen with same species as initial (index) blood culture on day 3-5. Microbiological relapse - defined as growth from any sterile site of the same organism as in the original blood culture after day 5 but before day 30; If any of the above criteria are fulfilled post randomisation, the composite end-point has occurred. A composite end-point has been used as overall mortality is expected to be low in this subset of patients screened for 'low-risk' infections, and so is unlikely to be a useful primary outcome measure in isolation. |
Composite end point; up to day 30. | |
Secondary | Time to clinical resolution of infection. | Time to clinical resolution of infection - defined as number of days from randomisation to resolution of fever (temperature >= 38.0 C) | Resolution of infection will be monitored from day of randomisation up to study day five or when the patient exhibits a temperature below 38 degrees celcius. | |
Secondary | Clinical and microbiological success day 5. | Clinical and microbiological success day 5 - defined as composite result of survival PLUS resolution of fever and leucocytosis (white blood cell count >12x109/L) PLUS sterilisation of blood cultures by day 5 post randomisation . | Day five. | |
Secondary | Length of hospital and/or ICU stay post randomisation. | Length of hospital and/or ICU stay post randomisation. | Participants will be followed for the duration of their hospitalisation and/or up to the thirty day study time period. | |
Secondary | Requirement for ICU admission: if not in ICU at the time of enrolment, during days 1 to 5 post-randomisation. | Requirement for ICU admission: if not in ICU at the time of enrolment, during days 1 to 5 post-randomisation. | Days 1-5. | |
Secondary | Infection with a piperacillin-tazobactam / carbapenem resistant organism or Clostridium difficile. | Infection with a piperacillin-tazobactam / carbapenem resistant organism or Clostridium difficile - defined as composite result of growth of a meropenem or piperacillin-tazobactam resistant Gram-negative organism from any clinical (non-screening) specimen collected from day 5 post randomisation to day 30. A positive stool test for Clostridium difficile (by toxin EIA and/or PCR, depending on the laboratory protocol of the study site) will also be recorded. This endpoint is important since one of the purposes of establishing an alternative to carbapenem therapy is to reduce infections with multi-drug resistant organisms and assess the comparative risk of C. difficile. | Days 5-30. | |
Secondary | Microbiological failure with AmpC-mediated resistance. | Microbiological failure with AmpC-mediated resistance -- defined as growth of the same Enterobacter, Serratia, Providencia spp., Morganella morganii or Citrobacter freundii as in the original blood culture from any blood culture or other clinical sample taken after day 5 but before 30 days - with emergent resistance likely due to AmpC de-repression (i.e. resistance to third generation cephalosporins, and /or piperacillin-tazobactam), and re-infection by new strain excluded by molecular typing. | After day 5 before day 30. | |
Secondary | Colonisation with any multi-drug resistant organism. | Colonisation with any multi-drug resistant organism - defined as the isolation from any screening site (nose/groin/axilla/rectal swabs) of multi-drug resistant bacteria (i.e. MRSA, VRE, ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas or Acinetobacter) at any time from study enrolment to 30 days post initial blood culture collection. This will include any swabs or other specimens collected as part of routine clinical care at all study sites; at the RBWH site this will also include screening swabs taken at specific time-points for enhanced surveillance. | Days 1-30. | |
Secondary | Requirement for escalation of antibiotic therapy. | Requirement for escalation of antibiotic therapy (i.e. piperacillin-tazobactam to meropenem) or addition of second Gram-negative agent days 1 to 5. | Days 1-5. |
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