Sepsis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Treatment With Cotrimoxazole vs. Vancomycin for Infections Caused by Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus: Randomized Controlled Trial
Verified date | September 2015 |
Source | Rabin Medical Center |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Israel: Ethics Commission |
Study type | Interventional |
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (SA) is a major pathogen causing mainly
health-care associated infections and, lately, also community acquired infections. Few
treatment choices exist to treat these infections. The currently recommended antibiotics for
these infections are glycopeptides (vancomycin or teicoplanin). Glycopeptide treatment hs
several disadvantages. It is a last resort antibiotic family that should be reserved for the
future; Vancomycin is less effective that beta-lactam drugs for SA infections susceptible to
both agents; treatment can only be given intravenously; and use of vancomycin has led to the
development of SA strains with partial or complete resistance to vancomycin. Cotrimoxazole
is an old antibiotic active against most strains of MRSA, depending on local epidemiology.
Study hypothesis: The purpose of this study is to show that cotrimoxazole is as effective as
treatment with vancomycin for invasive MRSA infections.
We plan a randomized controlled trial comparing treatment with cotrimoxazole vs. vancomycin
for invasive MRSA infections. The primary efficacy outcome we will assess will be
Improvement or cure with or without antibiotic modifications, defined as: survival at 7 days
post randomization with resolution of fever (<38 for two consecutive days) and resolution of
hypotension (>90 systolic without need for vasopressor support); and physician's assessment
that the primary infection was improved or cured. The primary safety outcome will be
all-cause 30-day survival.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 252 |
Est. completion date | June 2014 |
Est. primary completion date | May 2014 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years to 100 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Adults >18 years - providing signed informed consent or, if unable, having a legal guardian or a caretaker that will sign informed consent - Patients with documented MRSA infections: - MRSA bacteremia - Other microbiologically documented MRSA infections defined as a clinical source of infection (CDC criteria) plus microbiological documentation of MRSA from the source of infection - Patients with highly probable MRSA infections, prior to microbiological documentation of the pathogen: - Suspected neurosurgical meningitis (including VP-shunt meningitis) - Sepsis during hemodialysis - Ventilator-associated pneumonia with prior antibiotic treatment within 48 hours - Catheter-related or suspected catheter-related infections - Surgical site infection in the presence of a foreign body Exclusion Criteria: Exclusion before randomization: - Previous antibiotic treatment directed against MRSA >48 hours (including vancomycin, fucidic acid, rifampicin or cotrimoxazole) - Known allergy to either study drug - Acute leukemia and/ or BMT with neutropenia <500/mm3 or <1000/mm3 and expected to decrease below 500/mm3 - Pregnancy, lactation - Previous enrollment in this study - Concurrent participation in another trial Exclusions after randomization: - Documented Staphylococcal infection resistant to cotrimoxazole or VISA or VRSA - Documented MSSA - Documented left-sided endocarditis |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Israel | Rambam Health Care Campus | Haifa | |
Israel | Rabin Medical Center; Beilinson Hospital and Davidoff Cancer Center | Petah Tikva |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Rabin Medical Center |
Israel,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Primary efficacy: Improved or cure with or without antibiotic modifications, defined as: survival at 7 days post randomization with resolution of fever and resolution of hypotension | 7 days | Yes | |
Primary | Primary safety: 30-day all cause mortality | 30 days | Yes | |
Secondary | Improved or cure without antibiotic modifications | 7 days | No | |
Secondary | Modification of the anti-staphylococcal treatment within 1 week of treatment onset for perceived failure of therapy | 7 days | No | |
Secondary | Survival at 7 days post randomization without the need for modification of the anti-staphylococcal antibiotic | 7 days | Yes | |
Secondary | Bacteriological failure, defined as persistent isolation of Staphylococcus aureus with the same phenotype 7 days after or more after treatment onset | 7 days | No | |
Secondary | Need for surgical intervention or other invasive procedures | 30 days | No | |
Secondary | Need for central catheter removal | 30 days | No | |
Secondary | Persistent bacteremia | 30 days | No | |
Secondary | All-cause mortality in ICU and in-hospital | 30 days | Yes | |
Secondary | Adverse events | 30 days | Yes | |
Secondary | Durations of fever, assigned antibiotic treatment, mechanical ventilation, ICU and hospital stay | 30 days | Yes | |
Secondary | Resistance development | 30 days | No |
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