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Clinical Trial Summary

Gram-negative bacteremia (GNB) is a frequent hospital & community-acquired infection, yet there is as yet no evidence from randomized studies on the optimal duration of antibiotic therapy. This point-of-care, multicenter randomized controlled non-inferiority trial will randomize 500 patients with GNB on day 5 of appropriate antibiotic therapy to either (1) a total of 7 days of antibiotic therapy, (2) a total of 14 days of antibiotic therapy, or (3) an individualized duration of antibiotic therapy (guided by the patient's clinical course & C-reactive protein levels). The primary outcome is the incidence of clinical failure at day 30.


Clinical Trial Description

Antibiotic resistance continues to grow and is now considered to be one of the most serious global threats of the 21st century. The key driver of resistance is antibiotic overuse; long antibiotic courses select for resistance among the trillions of bacteria hosted by the human body. There is as yet no evidence from randomized studies on its optimal duration of antibiotic therapy. Traditionally, guidelines have somewhat arbitrarily recommended long courses of two weeks, even though patients with no structural complications may recover after only five days of therapy. Evidence is mounting that longer courses leave patients with multi-resistant organisms. Indeed, given rising concerns over resistance, many physicians have reduced antibiotic durations for GNB to 7 days with no apparent untoward consequences.

This point-of-care, multicenter randomized controlled non-inferiority trial will randomize 500 patients with GNB on day 5 of appropriate antibiotic therapy to either (1) a total of 7 days of antibiotic therapy, (2) a total of 14 days of antibiotic therapy, or (3) an individualized duration of antibiotic therapy (guided by the patient's clinical course & C-reactive protein levels). The primary outcome is the incidence of clinical failure at day 30. Patients will be followed through day 90; secondary outcomes will include the incidence of clinical failure on days 60 and 90, the total number of antibiotic days, the incidence of antibiotic-related adverse events (including Clostridium difficile infection), the emergence of bacterial resistance, length of hospital stay. Cost-effectiveness/health-economic analyses will also be performed. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms

  • Bacteraemia Caused by Gram-Negative Bacteria
  • Bacteremia

NCT number NCT03101072
Study type Interventional
Source University of Geneva, Switzerland
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date April 27, 2017
Completion date August 26, 2019