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Clinical Trial Summary

The aim of this study is to test if procalcitonin (PCT) guided antibiotic stewardship in patients with lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) will be non-inferior, with at worst a 7.5% higher combined failure rate, as compared to standard care practice (current guidelines for LRTI) with reduced total antibiotic (AB) use and hospitalization rate and duration, respectively.


Clinical Trial Description

Background: Acute lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI), i.e. acute bronchitis and acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD), and community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), employ important hospital resources and often unnecessary antibiotic (AB) treatment courses. We demonstrated in four intervention trials enrolling > 1200 patients that procalcitonin (PCT)-guidance markedly reduces AB prescription and duration. To ascertain the external validity, safety and potential to improve the allocation of health care resources, a non-inferiority multicenter intervention trial has to be done.

Aim: To compare a strategy based on evidence-based guidelines with PCT guided AB therapy in LRTI with respect to outcome (combined disease-specific failure rates), use of AB and hospital resources.

Design: Investigator-initiated, controlled trial with an open intervention. Patients admitted with LRTI to hospital will be included and randomized 1:1 either to standard management or to the PCT-guided prescription of AB. Randomization will be stratified by centre (the hospital) and type of LRTI (Acute bronchitis/AECOPD/CAP).

Setting: Teaching hospitals and tertiary care clinics from northwestern and central Switzerland.

Patients: 18 years or older, with LRTI of > 1 and < 28 days duration. Excluded are patients without informed consent, not fluent in German, unlikely to comply, severe immuno-suppression, terminal condition where death is expected to occur during the current hospitalization, immediate need for intensive care.

Endpoints:

- Primary: Risk of combined disease-specific failure after 30 days.

- Secondary: AB exposure, side effects from ABs, time to AB treatment, rate and duration of hospitalization, time to clinical stability, disease activity scores.

Endpoints will be assessed at baseline, daily in hospitalized patients and after 30 and 180 days by structured phone interviews by blinded medical students.

Intervention: Participating physicians will receive evidence-based guidelines for the management of patients with LRTIs. Patients with LRTI will be randomized to PCT plus guidelines ("PCT group") versus only guidelines-guided AB treatment ("control group"). In patients randomized to the PCT group the use of ABs will be more or less discouraged (< 0.1 or < 0.25 ug/L) or encouraged (> 0.5 or > 0.25 ug/L), respectively. A re-evaluation after 6 to 24 hours in patients in whom antibiotics are withheld with worsening or non-improvement of vital signs with PCT (< 0.1 or < 0.25 ug/L) is recommended. During hospitalization, patients with AB treatment will be reassessed at day 3, 5 and 7 and in patients randomized to the PCT group it is recommended to stop AB based on PCT levels. In AB-treated outpatients or discharged patients with AECOPD and CAP randomized to the PCT group with uncomplicated course, the recommended duration of AB therapy will be based on the last PCT level and will be as follows: > 0.5 ug/L, 5 days; > 0.25 ug/L, 3 days; < 0.25 ug/L, stop AB.

Variables and measurement: Centers have to consecutively enroll all patients with LRTI. Baseline data on medical history and clinical items, additional diagnostic tests, co-morbidity, final prescribed treatment and reasons for hospital admission and stay will be collected. After a pilot/feasibility phase of 3 months, study recruitment will continue from Mar 2007 to Apr 2008.

Study hypothesis: PCT guidance will be non-inferior with at worst a 7.5% higher combined failure rate as compared to standard care practice with a reduced total AB use and hospitalization rate and duration, respectively.

Analyses: These will be done based on an intention-to-treat and a per-protocol principle. With an assumed combined failure rate of 15% to 20%, a non-inferiority margin of 7.5%, a maximum of 5% losses to follow-up, a value of 5% and power of 90%, the total sample size is 806 α one-sided to 1002.

Interim monitoring: Regular review of serious adverse events, quality and integrity of the study by an independent data safety and monitoring board. Safety interim analysis and blinded assessment (i.e., with both arms pooled) of the diagnostic and prognostic accuracy of biomarkers after 50% of the patients recruited.

Ancillary projects: Six related projects will be performed alongside to this study (including, cost-effectiveness, nursing and social influence on hospitalization, prognostic value of novel biomarkers) to synergize scientific efforts.

Significance: Due to the high prevalence and absorption of hospital resources, this study will offer the potential for large improvements in the management of LRTIs, along with substantial reduction in hospitalization costs and AB resistance. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Diagnostic


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00350987
Study type Interventional
Source University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date October 2006
Completion date June 2008

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