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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05137119
Other study ID # CT19029
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 4
First received
Last updated
Start date February 16, 2022
Est. completion date December 1, 2028

Study information

Verified date June 2024
Source University of Melbourne
Contact Lauren Barina
Phone +61 (03) 8344 1623
Email lauren.barina@unimelb.edu.au
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The Staphylococcus aureus Network Adaptive Platform (SNAP) trial is an International Multi-Centered Randomised Adaptive Platform Clinical Trial to evaluate a range of interventions to reduce mortality for patients with Staphylococcus Aureus bacteraemia (SAB).


Description:

Infection of the bloodstream with the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus (Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia, SAB) is a serious infection that results in 15-30% of affected patients dying within three months of acquiring the infection. Treatment of this infection requires patients to be hospitalised, treated with prolonged antibiotics through an intravenous line, and carefully examined for the occurrence of complications associated with this condition. At present, there are many treatment options in current use, with no clear agreement as to which of these is best. The SNAP trial aims to identify which treatment options for SAB results in the fewest patients dying within the first 90 days after an infection. In contrast to a conventional clinical trial, the SNAP trial will examine multiple different treatment options at once. Patients will be randomly assigned to different concurrent treatment options currently considered acceptable in routine medical care, but as the trial progresses, more patients will be assigned to treatments that appear to have better outcomes than those with worse outcomes. The trial will adapt to accumulating trial evidence, on a regular basis, by removing treatment options found to be inferior, incorporating new treatment options, and ensuring that all patients in the trial receive the best treatments once they have been identified. Over time, we hope to determine the best combination of treatment options for patients with SAB. The SNAP Trial infrastructure will also support a number of sub-studies. A list of all active sub-studies can be found on the SNAP website: https://www.snaptrial.com.au/substudies.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 8000
Est. completion date December 1, 2028
Est. primary completion date December 1, 2028
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group N/A and older
Eligibility PLATFORM Inclusion Criteria: Patients must fulfil all of the following criteria to be eligible to enter the SNAP trial: 1. Staphylococcus aureus complex grown from =1 blood culture 2. Admitted to a participating hospital at the time of eligibility assessment PLATFORM Exclusion Criteria: Potentially eligible participants meeting any of the following criteria at the time of eligibility assessment for platform entry will be excluded from the trial: 1. Time of anticipated platform entry is greater than 72 hours post collection of the index blood culture. Where the time of culture collection is not recorded, the time of laboratory registration of the sample will be used as an alternative 2. Polymicrobial bacteraemia, defined as more than one organism (at species level) in the index blood cultures OR in any subsequent blood culture reported between the collection of the index blood culture and platform eligibility assessment, excluding those organisms judged to be contaminants by either the microbiology laboratory or treating clinician. 3. Known previous participation in the randomised SNAP platform 4. Known positive blood culture for S. aureus (of the same silo: PSSA, MSSA or MRSA) between 72 hours and 180 days prior to the time of eligibility assessment 5. Treating team deems enrolment in the study is not in the best interest of the patient 6. Treating team believes that death is imminent and inevitable 7. Patient is for end-of-life care and antibiotic treatment is considered not appropriate 8. Patient <18 years of age and paediatric recruitment not approved at recruiting site 9. Patient has died since the collection of the index blood culture To be included in any of the following DOMAINS the participant must met eligible for the PLATFORM (as listed above) ADJUNCTIVE TREATMENT DOMAIN Inclusion Criteria: 1. All participants that met the PLATFORM eligible are eligible to be included in this domain unless they meet any of the following exclusions listed. 2. Patients are eligible for this domain regardless of S. aureus susceptibility testing results to clindamycin. Exclusion criteria: 1. Previous type 1 hypersensitivity reaction to lincosamides 2. Currently receiving clindamycin (lincomycin) or linezolid which cannot be ceased or substituted 3. Necrotising fasciitis 4. Current C. difficile associated diarrhoea (any severity) 5. Current severe diarrhoea from any cause (defined as Grade 3 or higher) 5. Known CDAD (C.Difficile Associated Diarrhoea) in the past 3 months, or CDAD relapse in the past 12 months 6. At the time of domain eligibility assessment, more than 4 hours has elapsed since platform entry 7. Treating clinician deems enrolment in this domain is not in the best interest of the patient PSSA, MSSA TREATMENT DOMAIN (backbone) Inclusion Criteria: 1. For PSSA silo: Index blood culture is penicillin-susceptible as per phenotypic disc testing with EUCAST (a P1 disc diffusion with a feathered zone >=26mm) OR CLSI (a P10 disc diffusion) defined criteria 2. For MSSA silo: Index blood culture isolate is methicillin-susceptible but penicillin resistant Exclusion Criteria (PSSA & MSSA): 1. >72 hours have elapsed since the collection of the index blood culture (i.e. the time of collection of the first positive blood culture from the patient during this episode) 2. History of type I hypersensitivity reaction (i.e. anaphylaxis or angioedema) to any penicillin or cephalosporin 3. History of severe delayed reaction (e.g. allergic interstitial nephritis, cutaneous vasculitis, Stevens-Johnson, DRESS, etc.) to any penicillin or cephalosporin 4. PSSA silo: Non-severe rash to any penicillin (unless patient has been subsequently de-labelled; this criteria does not include criteria 2 and 3 above), or MSSA silo: Non-severe rash to cefazolin or any penicillin (unless patient has been subsequently de-labelled) (Nausea, diarrhoea, headache, and other non-specific symptoms are NOT allergies, they are drug intolerance, and they are not exclusion criteria. Similarly, a vague history of an allergy of unclear nature, or a family history of allergy are not exclusions.) 5. Treating team deems enrolment in this domain is not in the best interest of the patient 6. Currently receiving maintenance dialysis (haemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis) (Acute renal replacement therapy (including CRRT, haemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis) are not exclusions. Such patients are eligible as long as appropriate vascular access is available or can be arranged.) 7. Polymicrobial bacteraemia (defined as more than one organism [at species level] in blood cultures, excluding those organisms judged to be contaminants by either the microbiology laboratory or treating clinician) reported between collection of the index blood culture and backbone domain eligibility assessment 8. Patient currently being treated with a systemic antibacterial agent that cannot be ceased or substituted for interventions allocated within the platform (unless antibiotic is listed in Table 1 of the DSA, which specifies allowed antibiotics with limited absorption from the gastrointestinal tract or negligible antimicrobial activity against S. aureus) MRSA TREATMENT DOMAIN (backbone) Inclusion Criteria: 1. MRSA confirmed microbiologically Exclusion Criteria: 1. Time to allocation reveal is >72 hours from time of index blood culture collection 2. Severe allergy to any beta-lactam (including cefazolin) Immediate severe allergy: Anaphylaxis/angioedema Severe delayed allergy: Severe cutaneous adverse reaction (SCAR; including Steven Johnson Syndrome, Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis, Drug Rash with Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms (DRESS) and acute generalised exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP)), severe drug induced liver injury, proven allergic interstitial nephritis, immune-mediated haemolytic anaemia and other severe cytopenia. 3. Non-severe rash to cefazolin Nausea, diarrhoea, headache and other non-specific symptoms are NOT allergies, they are drug intolerance, and they are not exclusion criteria. Similarly, a vague history of an allergy of unclear nature, or a family history of allergy are not exclusions.) 3. Severe allergy or non-severe rash to both vancomycin AND daptomycin Vancomycin infusion reaction (formerly known as "red man syndrome") is due to direct histamine release and is not generally an allergy, and therefore is not considered an exclusion. 5. Treating team deems enrolment in the domain is not in the best interest of the patient 6. Polymicrobial bacteraemia (defined as more than one organism [at species level] in blood cultures, excluding those organisms judged to be contaminants by either the microbiology laboratory or treating clinician) reported between collection of the index blood culture and backbone domain eligibility assessment. 7. Patient currently being treated with a systemic antibacterial agent that cannot be ceased or substituted for interventions allocated within the platform (unless antibiotic is listed in Table 1 of the DSA, which specifies allowed antibiotics with limited absorption from the gastrointestinal tract or negligible antimicrobial activity against S. aureus) EARLY ORAL SWITCH DOMAIN Inclusion Criteria: Day 7 (+/- 2 days): 1. Clearance of SAB by platform Day 2: blood cultures negative for S. aureus from platform Day 2 onwards AND no known subsequent positive blood cultures 2. Afebrile (<37.8°C) for the past 72 hours (at time of judging eligibility) 3. Primary focus is either line related (either central or peripheral IV cannula) or skin and soft tissue, AND source control achieved (for 'line-related' this means line removed; for 'skin and soft tissue' means site PI considers source control to have been achieved and any abscess more than 2cm diameter has been drained) 4. No evidence of metastatic foci (on clinical or radiological examination, but radiological imaging is not required to exclude metastatic foci if not clinically indicated) Day 14 (+/- 2 days): 1. Clearance of SAB by platform Day 5: blood cultures negative for S. aureus from platform Day 5 (+/-1 day) AND no known subsequent positive blood cultures. If the most recent blood culture from Day 2-4 is negative for S. aureus, blood cultures do not need to be repeated on Day 5 to fulfil eligibility criteria (Day 5 blood cultures will be assumed to be negative in this situation) 2. Afebrile (<37.8°C) for the past 72 hours (at time of judging eligibility) 3. Site Principal Investigator has determined that source control is adequate Exclusion Criteria: When judging eligibility at platform Day 7 (+/- 2 days) and at Day 14 (+/- 2 days), exclusion criteria are: 1. Adherence to oral agents unlikely (as judged by site PI in consultation with the treating team) 2. Unreliable gastrointestinal absorption (e.g. vomiting, diarrhoea, nil by mouth, anatomical reasons) 3. There are no appropriate oral antibiotics due to contraindications, drug availability, or antibiotic resistance 4. Ongoing IV therapy unsuitable e.g. no IV access 5. Clinician deems not appropriate for early oral switch 6. Patient no longer willing to participate in domain In the lead-up to judging eligibility, it may be helpful to discuss with the patient the potential for continued IV treatment versus oral switch, to allow hospital discharge planning 7. Clinical team deems that sufficient duration of antibiotic therapy has already been provided Exclusions when judging eligibility for early oral switch at trial Day 7 (+/- 2 days): 1. Presence of prosthetic cardiac valve, pacemaker or other intracardiac implant 2. Presence of intravascular clot, graft, or other intravascular prosthetic material Intravascular clot excludes superficial peripheral IV line-related thrombophlebitis. Intravascular prosthetic material excludes coronary artery stents) 3. Intravascular/intracardiac infections (e.g. endocarditis, mycotic aneurysm) 4. Presence of other intracardiac abnormalities felt to put patient at increased risk of endocarditis (e.g., bicuspid aortic valve) PET/CT DOMAIN Inclusion Criteria: 1. PET/CT participating site 2. Patient is accessible for PET/CT - a patient is considered accessible if the site team are able to access the participant medical records, arrange for a PET/CT scan for the patient, and discuss this domain with the patient and their treating healthcare providers. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Pregnant - patients of childbearing potential should be assessed for pregnancy status and a pregnancy test performed (if not performed within the past 10 days) 2. Currently breastfeeding 3. < 18 years of age 4. Patient has had PET/CT in the past 7 days 5. Patient needs PET/CT in the next 7 days (in the opinion of the clinical team, at the time of eligibility assessment) 6. Clinically unstable for PET/CT (as judged by the treating clinical team, taking into account need for organ support (including inotropes) and capacity to lie flat for the PET/CT) 7. Contraindication to PET/CT (e.g., claustrophobia, persistently elevated blood sugar levels [>12.5mmol/L] that cannot be corrected). 8. Patient no longer willing to participate in the domain - in the days leading up to judging eligibility, it may be helpful to discuss with the patient the potential for PET/CT vs no PET/CT to allow imaging planning 9. Clinician deems participation in this domain is not in the patient's best interests

Study Design


Intervention

Drug:
Cefazolin
Cefazolin
Penicillin
benzylpenicillin
Clindamycin
Clindamycin
Vancomycin
Vancomycin or Daptomycin
Other:
Effectiveness of early switch to oral antibiotics
This involves testing a strategy rather than individual antibiotic agents
Radiation:
Whole body FDG PET/CT Imaging
Whole body FDG PET/CT imaging will be performed using a standardised protocol describing patient preparation and minimum specifications for radiopharmaceutical production, quality control, and PET/CT acquisition.

Locations

Country Name City State
Australia Lyell McEwin Hospital Adelaide South Australia
Australia Grampians Health Ballarat Victoria
Australia Flinders Medical Centre Bedford Park South Australia
Australia Bendigo Health Bendigo Victoria
Australia Sunshine Coast University Hospital Birtinya Queensland
Australia Blacktown Hospital Blacktown New South Wales
Australia Box Hill Hospital Box Hill Victoria
Australia Cairns Hospital Cairns Queensland
Australia Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Camperdown New South Wales
Australia Monash Children's Hospital Clayton Victoria
Australia Monash Health - Monash Medical Centre & Jesse McPherson Private Hospital Clayton Victoria
Australia Concord Repatriation and General Hospital Concord New South Wales
Australia St Vincent's Hospital Sydney Darlinghurst New South Wales
Australia Western Health - Footscray, Joan Kirner & Sunshine Hospitals Footscray Victoria
Australia Frankston Hospital Frankston Victoria
Australia Canberra Hospital Garran Australia Capital Territory
Australia Barwon Health - University Hospital Geelong Geelong Victoria
Australia Austin Hospital Heidelberg Victoria
Australia Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Herston Queensland
Australia Royal Hobart Hospital Hobart Tasmania
Australia Ipswich Hospital Ipswich Queensland
Australia Nepean Hospital Kingswood New South Wales
Australia St George Hospital Kogarah New South Wales
Australia Launceston Hospital Launceston Tasmania
Australia Liverpool Hospital Liverpool New South Wales
Australia Logan Hospital Meadowbrook Queensland
Australia Alfred Hospital Melbourne Victoria
Australia Fiona Stanley Hospital Murdoch Western Australia
Australia Perth Children's Hospital Nedlands Western Australia
Australia John Hunter Hospital New Lambton Heights New South Wales
Australia John Hunter Children's Hospital Newcastle New South Wales
Australia Women and Children's Hospital North Adelaide South Australia
Australia Women's and Children's Hospital North Adelaide South Australia
Australia Orange Health Service Orange New South Wales
Australia Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne Parkville Victoria
Australia Royal Melbourne Hospital Parkville Victoria
Australia Armadale Hospital Perth Western Australia
Australia Royal Perth Hospital Perth Western Australia
Australia Prince of Wales Hospital Randwick New South Wales
Australia Sydney Children's Hospital Randwick New South Wales
Australia Redcliffe Hospital Redcliffe Queensland
Australia Robina Hospital Robina Queensland
Australia Goulburn Valley Health Shepparton Victoria
Australia Queensland Children's Hospital South Brisbane Queensland
Australia Gold Coast University Hospital Southport Queensland
Australia Royal Darwin Hospital Tiwi Northern Territory
Australia La Trobe Regional Hospital Traralgon Victoria
Australia The Children's Hospital at Westmead Westmead New South Wales
Australia Westmead Hospital Westmead New South Wales
Australia Wollongong Hospital Wollongong New South Wales
Australia Princess Alexandra Hospital Woolloongabba Queensland
Canada Foothills Medical Center Calgary Alberta
Canada Peter Lougheed Centre Calgary Alberta
Canada Rockyview Hospital Calgary Alberta
Canada South Health Campus Calgary Alberta
Canada Toronto East Health Network - Michael Garron Hospital East York Ontario
Canada University Health Network - Toronto General Hospital East York Ontario
Canada University of Alberta Hospital Edmonton Alberta
Canada Hamilton Health Sciences - Hamilton General Hospital Hamilton Ontario
Canada Hamilton Health Sciences - Juravinski Hospital Hamilton Ontario
Canada Kingston Health Sciences Centre - Kingston General Hospital Kingston Ontario
Canada CISSS - Hôpital Cité-de-la-Santé Hospital Laval Quebec
Canada London Health Sciences Centre - University Hospital, LHSC London Ontario
Canada Jewish General Hospital Montréal Quebec
Canada McGill University Health Centre - Montral General Hospital Montréal Quebec
Canada McGill University Health Centre - Montreal Children's Hospital Montréal Quebec
Canada McGill University Health Centre - Royal Victoria Hospital Montréal Quebec
Canada Niagara Health - Niagara Falls Site Niagara Falls Ontario
Canada The Ottawa Hospital - Civic Campus Ottawa Ontario
Canada The Ottawa Hospital - General Campus Ottawa Ontario
Canada Richmond Hospital Richmond British Columbia
Canada Eastern Health - Health Sciences Centre (Memorial University) Saint John's Newfoundland and Labrador
Canada Eastern Regional Health Authority - St. Clare's Mercy Hospital Saint John's Newfoundland and Labrador
Canada Hôpital Régional de Saint Jérôme Saint-Jérôme Quebec
Canada Sault Area Hospital Sault-Sainte-Marie Ontario
Canada University of Sherbrooke Health Centre - Hospital Fleurimont Sherbrooke Quebec
Canada University of Sherbrooke Health Centre - Hotel Dieu Sherbrooke Quebec
Canada Niagara Health - St. Catharines Site St. Catharines Ontario
Canada Fraser Health Authority - Surrey Memorial Hospital Surrey British Columbia
Canada Sinai Heath System - Mount Sinai Hospital Toronto Ontario
Canada Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre Toronto Ontario
Canada Unity Health - St Michael's Hospital Toronto Ontario
Canada Unity Health Toronto - St Joseph's Health Centre Toronto Ontario
Canada University Health Network - Toronto Western Hospital Toronto Ontario
Canada Vancouver General Hospital Vancouver British Columbia
Canada Grace Hospital Winnipeg Manitoba
Canada Health Sciences Centre Winnipeg Winnipeg Manitoba
Canada St. Boniface Hospital Winnipeg Manitoba
Israel Rambam Health Care Campus Haifa
Israel Beilinson Hospital Petah tikva
Israel Schneider Hospital Petah tikva
Israel Sheba Medical Centre Ramat Gan
Netherlands Jeroen Bosch Hospital 's-Hertogenbosch
Netherlands UMC Groningen Groningen
Netherlands Antonius Ziekenhuis Nieuwegein
Netherlands Radboud University Medical Center Nijmegen
Netherlands Ikazia Ziekenhuis Rotterdam
Netherlands University Medical Center Utrecht Utrecht
New Zealand KidzFirst Auckland
New Zealand Starship Hospital Auckland
New Zealand Hutt Valley Hospital Boulcott Lower Hutt
New Zealand Christchurch Hospital Christchurch Canterbury
New Zealand Auckland City Hospital Grafton Auckland
New Zealand Waikato Hospital Hamilton
New Zealand Wellington Hospital Newtown Wellington
New Zealand Middlemore Hospital Otahuhu Auckland
New Zealand North Shore Hospital Takapuna Auckland
New Zealand Tauranga Hospital Tauranga
New Zealand Whangarei Hospital Whangarei
Singapore National University Hospital Singapore
Singapore Singapore General Hospital Singapore
Singapore Tan Tock Seng Hospital Singapore
South Africa Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Academic Hospital Johannesburg
South Africa Helen Joseph Hospital Johannesburg
South Africa Rahima Moosa Mother and Child Hospital Johannesburg
United Kingdom NHS Grampian Aberdeen
United Kingdom University Hospitals Birmingham Birmingham
United Kingdom Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals Brighton
United Kingdom North Bristol Bristol
United Kingdom University Hospitals Bristol and Weston Bristol
United Kingdom Cambridge University Hospitals Cambridge
United Kingdom Cardiff and Vale University Cardiff
United Kingdom Royal Cornwall Hospitals Cornwall
United Kingdom Royal Devon University Healthcare Devon
United Kingdom NHS Tayside Dundee
United Kingdom Lothian Western General Edinburgh
United Kingdom Greater Glasgow and Clyde Glasgow
United Kingdom NHS Golden Jubilee Glasgow
United Kingdom Hull University Teaching Hospitals Hull
United Kingdom Leeds Teaching Hospitals Leeds
United Kingdom Liverpool University Hospital Liverpool
United Kingdom Barts Health London
United Kingdom Great Ormond Street London
United Kingdom Guys and St Thomas' London
United Kingdom Imperial College Healthcare London
United Kingdom Kings College Hospital London
United Kingdom Royal Free London London
United Kingdom University College London Hospitals London
United Kingdom Whittington Health London
United Kingdom Manchester University Hospitals Manchester
United Kingdom Newcastle Upon Tyne Hospitals Newcastle Upon Tyne
United Kingdom Nottingham University Hospitals Nottingham
United Kingdom Oxford University Hospitals Oxford
United Kingdom Sheffield Teaching Hospitals Sheffield
United Kingdom South Tees Hospitals South Tees
United Kingdom University Hospital Southampton Southampton
United Kingdom NHS Forth Valley Stirling
United Kingdom University Hospitals of North Midlands Stoke
United Kingdom Swansea Bay University Health Board Swansea

Sponsors (17)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Melbourne Aotearoa Clinical Trials, Berry Consultants, Houston Medical Research Institute, King's College London, McGill University Health Centre/Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, Menzies School of Health Research, Queensland University of Technology, Radboud University Medical Center, Rambam Health Care Campus, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Telethon Kids Institute, The Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, The University of Queensland, UMC Utrecht, University College, London

Countries where clinical trial is conducted

Australia,  Canada,  Israel,  Netherlands,  New Zealand,  Singapore,  South Africa,  United Kingdom, 

References & Publications (6)

de Kretser D, Mora J, Bloomfield M, Campbell A, Cheng MP, Guy S, Hensgens M, Kalimuddin S, Lee TC, Legg A, Mahar RK, Marks M, Marsh J, McGlothlin A, Morpeth SC, Sud A, Ten Oever J, Yahav D, Tong SY, Davis JS, Walls G, Goodman AL, Bonten M; Staphylococcus aureus Network Adaptive Platform (SNAP) Study Group members. Early oral antibiotic switch in Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia: The Staphylococcus aureus Network Adaptive Platform (SNAP) Trial Early Oral Switch Protocol. Clin Infect Dis. 2023 Oct 31:ciad666. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciad666. Online ahead of print. — View Citation

Henderson A, Cheng MP, Chew KL, Coombs GW, Davis JS, Grant JM, Gregson D, Giulieri SG, Howden BP, Lee TC, Nguyen V, Mora JM, Morpeth SC, Robinson JO, Tong SYC, Van Hal SJ; Microbiology Working Group of the Staphylococcus aureus Network Adaptive Platform (SNAP) Trial Group. A multi-site, international laboratory study to assess the performance of penicillin susceptibility testing of Staphylococcus aureus. J Antimicrob Chemother. 2023 Jun 1;78(6):1499-1504. doi: 10.1093/jac/dkad116. — View Citation

Mahar RK, McGlothlin A, Dymock M, Lee TC, Lewis RJ, Lumley T, Mora J, Price DJ, Saville BR, Snelling T, Turner R, Webb SA, Davis JS, Tong SYC, Marsh JA; SNAP Global Trial Steering Committee. A blueprint for a multi-disease, multi-domain Bayesian adaptive platform trial incorporating adult and paediatric subgroups: the Staphylococcus aureus Network Adaptive Platform trial. Trials. 2023 Dec 6;24(1):795. doi: 10.1186/s13063-023-07718-x. — View Citation

Malhame I, Hardy E, Cheng MP, Tong SY, Bowen AC. Walking the walk to include pregnant participants in non-obstetric clinical trials: Insights from the SNAP Trial. Obstet Med. 2023 Mar;16(1):3-4. doi: 10.1177/1753495X231163351. Epub 2023 Mar 22. No abstract available. — View Citation

Symons TJ, Straiton N, Gagnon R, Littleford R, Campbell AJ, Bowen AC, Stewart AG, Tong SYC, Davis JS. Consumer perspectives on simplified, layered consent for a low risk, but complex pragmatic trial. Trials. 2022 Dec 28;23(1):1055. doi: 10.1186/s13063-022-07023-z. — View Citation

Tong SYC, Mora J, Bowen AC, Cheng MP, Daneman N, Goodman AL, Heriot GS, Lee TC, Lewis RJ, Lye DC, Mahar RK, Marsh J, McGlothlin A, McQuilten Z, Morpeth SC, Paterson DL, Price DJ, Roberts JA, Robinson JO, van Hal SJ, Walls G, Webb SA, Whiteway L, Yahav D, Davis JS; Staphylococcus aureus Network Adaptive Platform (SNAP) Study Group. The Staphylococcus aureus Network Adaptive Platform Trial Protocol: New Tools for an Old Foe. Clin Infect Dis. 2022 Nov 30;75(11):2027-2034. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciac476. Erratum In: Clin Infect Dis. 2023 Apr 17;76(8):1532-1533. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary All-cause mortality at 90 days after platform entry The primary endpoint for all cells and domains will be all-cause mortality at 90 days after platform entry.
The primary endpoint will be determined through a search of hospital databases for a record of a participant's death, or follow-up contact with the participant's community healthcare provider, or follow-up contact with the patient or their nominated carer, or linkage with death registries.
From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
Secondary All-cause mortality at 14, 28 and 42 days after platform entry Determined through a search of hospital databases for a record of a participant's death, or follow-up contact with the participant's community healthcare provider, or follow-up contact with the patient or their nominated carer, or linkage with death registries. From randomisation (day 1) until day 14, 28, and 42
Secondary Duration of survival censored at 90 days after platform entry Determined through a search of hospital databases for a record of a participant's death, or follow-up contact with the participant's community healthcare provider, or follow-up contact with the patient or their nominated carer, or linkage with death registries. From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
Secondary Length of stay of acute index inpatient hospitalisation for those surviving until discharge from acute inpatient facilities (excluding HITH/COPAT/OPAT/rehab). Acute index hospitalisation is defined as continuous hospital admission to one or more acute inpatient facilities for the index episode. This does not include HITH/OPAT/COPAT and stepdown inpatient rehabilitation/post-acute care. It does include admission to acute care hospitals immediately preceding and following those at the enrolling site. From randomisation (day 1) until discharge from acute inpatient facilities, truncated at 90 days.
Secondary Length of stay of total index hospitalisation for those surviving until hospital discharge (including HITH/COPAT/OPAT/rehab) Total index hospitalisation is defined as continuous hospital admission to one or more inpatient facilities for the index episode, including HITH/OPAT/COPAT and stepdown inpatient rehabilitation/post-acute care (if continuous with the initial inpatient admission).
It includes admission to acute care hospitals immediately preceding and following those at the enrolling site.
From randomisation (day 1) to discharge from total index hospitalisation, truncated at 90 days
Secondary Time to being discharged alive from the total index hospitalisation (including HITH/COPAT/OPAT/rehab) truncated at 90 days after platform entry and all deaths within 90 days will be considered '90 days' From randomisation (day 1) to discharge from total index hospitalisation, truncated at 90 days
Secondary Microbiological treatment failure defined as positive sterile site culture for S. aureus [of the same silo as the index isolate between 14 and 90 days after platform entry). A sterile site means any sites deep to the skin and skin structures, including deep visceral and musculoskeletal abscesses that have been obtained in a sterile manner. From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
Secondary Diagnosis of new foci between 14 and 90 days after platform entry. The presence of new foci will be determined by the site investigator and can incorporate clinical, radiological, microbiological and pathological findings. From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
Secondary C. difficile diarrhoea as determined by a clinical laboratory in the 90 days following platform entry for participants =2 years of age. This means a stool submitted to a clinical laboratory has tested positive for C. difficile toxin or toxin gene. From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
Secondary Number of participants with Serious adverse reactions (SARs) in the 90 days following platform entry SARs defined only as events that are attributable to one or more study interventions From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
Secondary Health economic costs as detailed in the cost utility analysis appendix. Including hospital length of stay, readmissions, and patient employment status. From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
Secondary Proportion of participants who have returned to their usual level of function at day 90. Determined by whether the modified functional bloodstream infection score (FBIS) remained the same or improved between baseline and 90 days after platform entry. From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
Secondary Desirability of outcome ranking 1 (modified Antibiotic Resistance Leadership Group version) unable to insert modified ARLG table From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
Secondary Desirability of outcome ranking 2 (SNAP version) unable to insert SNAP DOOR table From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
Secondary Number of antibiotic days (IV and/or oral/enteral) All days on which any antibiotic dose is received should be counted - i.e. we are counting the number of whole or part days on which any antibiotics are received (not the number of defined daily doses of antibiotics). Topical, inhaled or other routes of administration besides IV or oral/enteral should not be counted. From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
Secondary Days alive and free of antibiotics All antibiotics should be included, not only those intended for treatment of S. aureus bacteraemia. It also includes prophylactic dose antibiotics (e.g., prophylactic dose trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole) From randomisation (day 1) until day 90
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