Nosocomial Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized, Multicenter Trial of Daptomycin Versus Vancomycin in the Treatment of Nosocomial or Healthcare-associated Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus Bacteremia
Hypothesis: The use of daptomycin to treat nosocomial or healthcare-associated bacteremia
due to methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) would increase the proportion of patients
whose blood cultures are sterilized after 72 hours by 15% relative to vancomycin and would
improve treatment safety.
Hypothesis: for MRSA nosocomial or healthcare related bacteriemia treatment, the use of
daptomycin versus vancomycin would increase by 15% the proportion of patients with
sterilized blood cultures at 72 hours and would increase the treatment safety.
Primary objective: To study the efficacy of daptomycin compared to vancomycin on the
sterilization of blood cultures after 72 hours of therapy.
Introduction: Nosocomial and/or healthcare-associated Staphylococcus aureus infections are
common, serious conditions. S. aureus accounts for about 20% of cases of nosocomial
bacteremia, and is associated with a mortality of 20-40%. This severity is due to the
virulence of the bacterium, and the age and comorbidity of the patients in whom the
infection occurs. First-line therapy is based on vancomycin, because the prevalence of
methicillin resistance in S. aureus (~20%) is still high in the hospital environment.
However the bactericidal activity of this drug is slow and it causes dose-dependent
nephrotoxicity. The persistence of positive blood cultures after 72 hours, a parameter which
in itself is predictive of the infection having a complicated clinical course, is seen in
about 35% of patients receiving vancomycin therapy.
Hypothesis: The use of daptomycin to treat nosocomial or healthcare-associated bacteremia
due to methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) would increase the proportion of patients
whose blood cultures are sterilized after 72 hours by 15% relative to vancomycin and would
improve treatment safety.
Primary objective: To study the efficacy of daptomycin compared to vancomycin on the
sterilization of blood cultures after 72 hours of therapy.
Secondary objectives: Clinical cure at D14 and D28; relapse-free clinical and
bacteriological cure at D90; mortality at D14, D28 and D90; treatment duration (in days)
before sterilization of blood cultures; side effects occurrence during treatment, renal
insufficiency; peripheral vein toxicity requiring placement of a central venous catheter;
side effects requiring changes to the study treatment ; duration of hospitalization for
bacteremia; increase of at least 2 dilutions in the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)
of daptomycin and/or vancomycin between the first and last clinical isolates of S. aureus.
Methodology: A prospective, multicenter, randomized, open-label study to compare daptomycin
monotherapy to vancomycin monotherapy. Patients will be randomized if they have a nosocomial
or healthcare-associated infection, a blood culture positive for Gram-positive cocci in
clusters, and a rapid molecular diagnostic test(GENEXPERT) that confirm the presence of
methicillin-resistant S. aureus. Daptomycin will be given once daily in monotherapy (10
mg/kg as a single infusion over 30 minutes into a peripheral vein). Standard therapy is
vancomycin in monotherapy given by intermittent or continuous infusion so as to obtain
trough concentrations of 15-20 mg/L or plateau concentrations of 20-25 mg/L, respectively.
The treatment duration for bacteremia in both arms is 14 days of intravenous therapy for
uncomplicated bacteremias and 28 days of intravenous therapy for complicated bacteremias,
defined by persistent fever or positive blood cultures after 72 h of the study treatment,
secondary septic localizations existing at enrollment, or presence of foreign material
without signs of infection.
The duration of the treatment of the study can be reduced if the patients answer the
following criteria:
Uncomplicated bacteremia: 10 days of treatment instead of 14 days if:
- 2 sterilization of blood cultures
- Patient clinically cured
- Visit J14 realized in the center
Complicated bacteremia: 21 days of treatment instead of 28 days if:
- 2 sterilization of blood cultures
- Patient clinically cured
- Visit J28 realized in the center
In every case, no oral relay has to substitute itself for the possible reduction of the
duration of the treatment of the study.
A blinded study design was not selected because the two treatments are administered very
differently, due to the invasive nature of continuous infusion pumps, and because the
primary objective concerns a microbiological outcome.
Patient management and clinical monitoring will comply with usual good clinical practice for
these patients. Visits on D14, D28 and D90 will be necessary. Laboratory monitoring will
comprise daily blood cultures until sterile cultures are obtained on 2 consecutive days;
full blood count (FBC), serum creatine, CPK before treatment, on D3, D7, D10 and D14 and,
for patients receiving 28 days of treatment, D21 and D28. Where myalgia with elevation of
creatine phosphokinase (CPK) > 5 N, or isolated elevation of CPK > 10 N occurs, treatment
with daptomycin will be discontinued and clinical and laboratory-based monitoring will be
maintained until normalization.
Number of subjects required: After 72 hours of vancomycin therapy, blood cultures are still
positive in about 35% of patients. The objective is to show the superiority of daptomycin in
the sterilization of blood cultures after 72 hours, by a margin of 15% (80% versus 65%).
With a power of 80% and a type I error rate of 5%, and addition of 10% to allow for
unevaluable outcomes and death before 72 hours, the number of subjects required in each arm
is 166 (total = 332 patients).
Study logistics: Duration of the study: 2 years; Enrollment period: 21 months; Duration of
each patient's participation: 3 months; Number of participating study sites: 15. Study sites
were chosen on the basis of the blood culture system used, of there having been > 10
methicillin-resistant S. aureus blood cultures in 2009 and the possibility of setting up
rapid diagnosis for the trial.
A two-person team consisting of a bacteriologist and a clinician will be responsible for
[screening], [enrollment] [and] [randomization] at [each] study site.
Mean number of patients enrolled per month per site: 1-5.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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