Sepsis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Quantification of Bacterial DNA in Septic Intensive Care Patients in Relation to Concentration of Antibiotics and Clinical Outcome: A Prospective Observation Study
The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether bacterial DNA clearance measured with droplet digital Polymerase Chain Reaction (ddPCR) can be used as a measure of bacterial load in septic intensive care patients. Furthermore, the aim is to examine a possible relation between clearance of bacterial DNA and clinical outcome in the septic patient, and the relationship between concentration of beta-lactam antibiotics and the clearance of bacterial DNA.
Septic syndrome caused by bloodstream infections represents a major healthcare problem
worldwide and is the leading cause of mortality in the non-cardiac intensive care unit (ICU).
Despite ongoing research efforts in sepsis, the mortality remains as high as 12-30%.
In severe sepsis, the time to adequate antibiotic therapy has been clearly linked to
survival. However, in the emergency room, it is challenging to identify the cause behind the
clinical presentation and identify patients who would benefit the most from antibiotic
treatment. An indiscriminate use of antibiotics inevitably leads to bacterial resistance and
unacceptable adverse events. Thus, there is a great and unmet medical need to develop novel
diagnostic instruments that could inform the clinician about who would need antibiotics and
who would not benefit from it. Furthermore, early identification of the causal microorganism
and the inflammatory status of the patients would improve decisions about treatments and
reduce administration of antibiotics.
Today the gold standard for diagnosis of bloodstream infections (BSI) is blood culture
followed by identification of species and resistance pattern by standard laboratory
procedures. This procedure is associated with a high specificity but also with a low
sensitivity. Probable reasons for a negative blood culture despite a strong clinical
suspicion could be insufficient blood volume in the culture bottles or antibiotic treatment
prior to blood sampling with a subsequent failure of the bacteria to grow in the bottles.
In recent years Polymerase Chain reaction (PCR) has been proposed as a method to determine
bacterial DNA based on amplification of specific subunits (16S and 18S) of bacterial
ribosomal RNA. PCR require very small amount of DNA. Another advantage is the possibility to
determine bacterial species from non-viable bacteria by multiplex PCRs. However most of those
multiplex PCRs have shown a limited sensitivity even though they also found clinical relevant
pathogens that were not detected with blood cultures. Another limitation is that
multiplex-PCR only detects at maximum 95% of all sepsis causing pathogens. In a recent
published study the author concluded that a tested multiplex PCR "on whole blood specimens"
in adjunct to current culture-based methods provided a clinical add-on value. The future role
of PCR and other molecular techniques in the clinical setting needs further evaluation.
A new method that could improve the diagnostics of sepsis and also have the possibility to
follow the bacterial DNA load during antibiotic treatment is Droplet Digital PCR (ddPCR).
This technique enables an absolute quantification of the sepsis causing pathogen targeting
either a species specific gene or the 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) gene, present in several
copies per bacteria. In ddPCR, the sample is divided into about 20.000 water-in-oil droplets,
and in all of them the PCR-reaction occurs. Following PCR, each droplet is analyzed to
determine the fraction of PCR-positive droplets giving the amount of bacterial DNA in the
original sample. The absolute target DNA template concentration can then be calculated, since
the size of the droplets is known, and by using Poisson distribution statistics for the
correction of more than one positive reaction in the same droplet.
To identify the sepsis causing pathogen sequencing of the 16S rDNA gene or a shotgun
metagenomics approach could be used. In the latter, all DNA in a sample is sequenced using
Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) and the sepsis causing pathogen can be both detected and
aims to be quantified through bioinformatics data analysis.
During the septic course the patient go from vasodilation to vascular leakage and finally a
hypotension. This together with added intravenous fluid treatment will increase the
distribution volume with an altered pharmacokinetic state for added antibiotics. Furthermore,
decreased kidney function is common in ICU patients and augmented creatinine clearance during
the acute phase of sepsis is described with increasing frequency. Therefore, it is difficult
to anticipate the optimal antibiotic dose for the septic patient. Indeed, it is shown that in
a considerable portion of ICU patients an adequate antibiotic exposure is not achieved and
this is associated with negative clinical outcome.
A dysregulated host response is a cornerstone of the current understanding of sepsis
pathophysiology. Initially during the sepsis course a proinflammatory response is induced by
early activation genes, including cytokines associated with inflammation: tumor necrosis
factor (TNF), Interleukin-1(IL-1), IL-12 and IL-18. Simultaneously an immune suppression is
induced by anti-inflammatory cytokines i.e IL-10 and transforming growth factor. A disrupted
homeostasis of the pro- and anti-inflammatory response is suggested to be part of the
dysregulated host response in sepsis although clinically available biomarkers for its
identification are lacking. Furthermore, the regulatory mediators involved in this process
and the association to bacterial clearance during sepsis needs further investigation.
The gastrointestinal tract may be a source of bacteria and a worsening of the septic
inflammation in ICU patients, if the epithelial barrier is disrupted. Thus intact
gastrointestinal function is critical in severely diseased patients. There are no clinically
available biomarkers of gastrointestinal function; however the recently described acute
gastrointestinal injury (AGI) score has been shown to correlate with adverse outcome in
ICU-patients.
The aim of the study is to investigate whether bacterial DNA in whole blood measured with
ddPCR can be used for assessment of bacterial clearance in septic intensive care patients. To
do so the investigators will search for a potential association between bacterial DNA
clearance and clearance of bacteremia detected by blood cultures.
Further, the aim is to examine a possible relation between clearance of bacterial DNA,
biomarkers of dysregulated host response, and clinical outcome in the septic patient. Outcome
is measured as: mortality on ICU, mortality <28 days, days in the ICU, change in Sequential
Organ Failure Assessment score(SOFA), time in assisted ventilation, lactate clearance, need
of vasopressors, and severity of gastrointestinal injury. Further, the aim is to study the
relationship between concentration of beta-lactam antibiotics i.e. the minimal inhibitory
concentration for the bacteria (T>MIC) detected and the clearance of bacterial DNA. The
material collected will also contribute to reveal the relationship between ddPCR and shot gun
sequencing in detecting the sepsis causing bacteria.
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