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Clinical Trial Summary

Ventilation-associated pneumonia (VAP) is the main site of healthcare-associated infections in the brain injured patients, with an incidence rate of 22% to 58%. VAP increases morbi-mortality, length of stay in intensive care and overall management costs. The prevention of ICU nosocomial infections depends on several measures : orotracheal intubation route, maintaining tube cuff pressure between 25 and 30 cm of water (H2O), maintaining a semi-seated position >= 30°, nasal and oropharyngeal care at regular intervals, striving to avoid unscheduled extubation, and use of a written sedation-analgesia algorithm allowing for early weaning from ventilation. Two randomized study show that administration of antibiotic therapy after intubation reduces the risk of early VAP incidence. However, in clinical practice, its administration solely purposes of limiting VAP occurence is not presently recommended. Indeed, to date no placebo blind controlled study was been realized and the fear of development of bacterial resistance remains stronger than the efficiency of this prevention measure. This aim of the present study is to show by a placebo randomized study that 2g of Ceftriaxone within 8 hours post-intubation after a brain injury decrease the risk of occurence an early VAP. Ancillary study An ancillary study is performed in 2 centres which routinely practice rectal swabs at admission and discharge of ICU, to survey intestinal flora (CHU of Angers and CHU of Rennes). The goal of this study is to compare the incidence of acquired cephalosporin resistant gram negative bacteria at the discharge of ICU between the 2 groups of patients, receiving or not ceftriaxone.


Clinical Trial Description

n/a


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms

  • Early Ventilation Acquired Pneumonia in Brain Injured Patients
  • Pneumonia

NCT number NCT02265406
Study type Interventional
Source Poitiers University Hospital
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 3
Start date October 2015
Completion date July 25, 2020