Bronchiectasis Clinical Trial
— BLTBrIVOfficial title:
Bacterial Load Guided Therapy for Severe Exacerbations of Bronchiectasis Requiring IntraVenous Antibiotic Therapy- BLT Br IV Study
Verified date | May 2020 |
Source | University of Edinburgh |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
From the British Thoracic Guidelines1 and a PUBMED search there are no randomised controlled
trials exploring optimum antibiotic duration for chest infections. The standard course of
intravenous antibiotics for exacerbations of bronchiectasis is 14 days. This is a preliminary
open labelled study to assess whether it is feasible to stop treatment earlier (day 8 or day
11) if the bacterial load is low or absent at days 7 or day 10 (it takes 24 hours for the
results to be processed). All patients will therefore have a minimum of 7 days intravenous
antibiotics. The intravenous antibiotic chosen is routinely used for exacerbations in
bronchiectasis.
Our hypothesis is that patients could have personalised treatment and be able to stop
antibiotics when the sputum bacterial load is low (<10^6 colony forming units/ml (cfu/ml)).
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 90 |
Est. completion date | February 1, 2020 |
Est. primary completion date | February 1, 2020 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Patients aged 18 and above - An established primary diagnosis of non cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis - Patients need to meet the criteria for needing intravenous antibiotic therapy. - Only the first exacerbation per patient will be used. Exclusion Criteria: - Patients with organisms resistant in vitro to Meropenem (this is known from previous sputum microbiology but is rare in our cohort); - Current smokers or ex-smokers of less than 1 year; - Cystic fibrosis; - Active allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis; - Active tuberculosis; - Poorly controlled asthma necessitating long term oral corticosteroids; - Pregnancy or breast feeding; - Active malignancy; - Severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) on long term oxygen therapy; - Patients requiring non invasive or invasive ventilation; - Known allergy to Meropenem which is very rare in our cohort. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh | Edinburgh |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Edinburgh | NHS Lothian |
United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Time to next exacerbation | The time to next exacerbation (all the patients are followed up in the bronchiectasis clinic and record the date of their exacerbations where they receive antibiotic therapy). | up to 1 year following IV antibiotics | |
Primary | Proportion of patients that stopped antibiotics early | The proportion of patients where we can stop antibiotic treatment early guided by bacterial load either on day 8 or day 11 instead of usual day 14 course. All patients will have a minimum of 7 days of intravenous antibiotics. | 14 days | |
Secondary | Clinical recovery at days 14 and 21 | Clinical recovery defined in this study is based on our clinical experience and our study evaluating useful endpoints in monitoring exacerbations. Clinical recovery is defined as: patients feeling better (quantitatively assessed using a 4 point or more improvement in St George's Respiratory Questionnaire or a 1.3 unit improvement or more in the Leicester Cough Questionnaire) and either a reduction in sputum purulence (purulent to mucopurulent, mucoid or no sputum; or mucopurulent to mucoid or no sputum) or a 50% reduction or more in 24 hour sputum volume. The reason for the two options here is that in clinical practice, some patients sputum purulence does not change but have a significant reduction in sputum volume. |
21 days | |
Secondary | Correlation of bacterial load with clinical response | The correlation of clinical response and reduction in bacterial load (sputum colour and volume, systemic inflammation, pulmonary physiology and assessment of exercise capacity) | 21 days | |
Secondary | Antibiotic side effects | Patients will be asked to report any side effects from the treatment and at what day these effects occurred. | 14 days |
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