Bloodstream Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of Clinical Outcomes in Bloodstream Infections With Carbapenem Hetero-resistant vs Carbapenem Resistant Klebsiella Pneumoniae (COMBAT)
COMBAT trial was contemplated to elucidate unknown clinical relevance of carbapenem heteroresistance among Klebsiella pneumoniae species. Bloodstream infections, type of frequently seen invasive infections that pathogen isolation, identification of antimicrobial resistance mechanisms can be performed efficiently, with carbapenem resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKp) and carbapenem hetero-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae will be compared in terms of relevant clinical outcomes such as 30-day mortality rate, 14-day clinical cure rate, 7-day microbiological eradication rate and 90-day relapse/re-infection rate. In addition, underlying molecular resistance mechanisms causing carbapenem hetero-resistance among Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates will be investigated by using whole genome sequences.
Main Objectives:
1. Conceiving the clinical relevance of carbapenem hetero-resistance phenomenon among
Klebsiella pneumoniae strains.
2. Identification of molecular resistance mechanisms causing carbapenem hetero-resistance
among Klebsiella pneumoniae strains
3. Identification of accuracy of gradient test (e.g. E-test) and disc diffusion test for
detection of carbapenem heteroresistance as compared with gold standard PAP analysis
Hypothesis
Main hypothesis
1- 30-day mortality rate is higher in bloodstream infections caused by CRKp than carbapenem
hetero-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae
Secondary hypothesis
1. 90-day relapse/re-infection rates are similar in CRKp and carbapenem heteroresistant Kp
groups. However, carbapenem monotherapy is associated with higher rate of
relapse/reinfection rate in treatment of bloodstream infection caused by carbapenem
heteoresistant K. pneumonia even if used as high dose and prolonged infusion regimens.
2. 14-day clinical cure rate is significantly higher in carbapenem heteroresistant Kp group
than CRKp group.
3. 14-day clinical cure rate is significantly lower in patients having BSI caused by
carbapenem hetero-resistant K. pneumoniae and treated with carbapenem monotherapy.
4. 7-day microbiological cure rate is significantly higher in carbapenem heteroresistant Kp
group than CRKp group.
5. 7-day microbiological cure rate is significantly lower in patients having BSI caused by
carbapenem heteroresistant K. pneumoniae and treated with carbapenem monotherapy.
Study Design:
Prospective multi-centre multinational study
Setting and study period:
Tertiary care hospitals form different parts of the world will be included in COMBAT trial.
Study period is scheduled to be 01.04.2020-01.04.2021 or longer until pre-defined sample size
is attained. Local (primary) investigators will collect microbiological and clinical data of
participants. Site investigators will screen the microbiology laboratory data in daily
interval to identify patients with CRKp or carbapenem hetero-resistant Kp bacteremia. All
consecutive patients with monobacterial CRKp or carbapenem hetero-resistant Kp BSI will be
eligible to be evaluated for inclusion in the study. Carbapenem resistance will be determined
according to 2015 CDC criteria. The presence of carbapenem hetero-resistance among Kp blood
culture isolates will be initially determined based on observation of some sub-colonies in
inhibition zone of carbapenems. The presence of hetero-resistance against only one type of
carbapenems including ertapenem, imipenem, meroepenem will be sufficient to be included.
Identification of carbapenem hetero-resistant subpopulations is not infrequent while
performing disc diffusion tests or gradient tests (eg. E-test) in our daily practices.
However, the exact sensitivity and specificity of these tests for identification of
carbapenem hetero-resistance among gram-negative microorganisms are not known yet. The
participants with BSI caused by carbapenem hetero-resistant Kp that is defined by disc
diffusion or gradient test results will be recruited into carbapenem hetero-resistant Kp
group. However, clinical carbapenem hetero-resistant Kp isolates will be transfered to
pre-defined reference centres of each country via appropriate transfer culture media.
Population analysis profiling (PAP) will be performed for these pathogens in reference
centres. Although PAP is recommended method for identification of carbapenem
hetero-resistance, it is cumbersome for microbiology laboratories for routine usage.
Participants suspected of having BSI with carbapenem hetero-resistant Kp based on routine
microbiological methods will be initially included and data of these patients will be
recorded but, these patients will be excluded from our final analysis if PAP analysis does
not confirm the presence of carbapenem hetero-resistance in these pathogens. PAP analysis
will be used as a confirmatory test for identification of carbapenem heteroresistance among
Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates. PAP will be performed at the end of patient recruitment and
after collection of all isolates in reference centers. Therefore, treatment decisions and any
other interventions will not be affected by the results of PAP analysis. PAP will only be
used for identification of presence of carbapenem hetero-resistance among suspicious isolates
as a gold standard method. This study will be purely observational and no intervention will
be in any part of patient follow-up (eg. diagnosis, treatment etc.) and all decisions will be
taken by attending physicians. Briefly, PAP analysis will be performed as following: one
colony from a culture grown overnight on Columbia agar is inoculated into 5 ml of
Luria-Bertani broth. After 24 h of incubation, 0.1 ml of bacterial suspension with a density
corresponding 0.5 McFarland is serially diluted and spread onto Mueller-Hinton agar
containing two-fold serial dilutions of meropenem, imipenem, ertapenem with concentrations
ranging from 0.25 to 256 mg/L. One hundred microliters of ten-fold serial dilution(s) of a
0.5 McFarland suspension is spread on drug-free Mueller-Hinton agar and incubated for 48h at
37 °C to determine the CFUs/ml. Colony counts from three replicate plates are performed for
all of the isolates, and mean values are estimated. The number of resistant cells in 0.1 ml
of starting bacterial suspension is calculated and the log CFUs/ml is plotted against the
antibiotic concentration. The frequency of hetero-resistant subpopulations at the highest
drug concentration will be calculated and divided the number of colonies grown on
antibiotic-containing plates by the colony counts from the same bacterial inoculum plated
onto antibiotic-free plates. A protocol for PAP analysis will be prepared and send to
reference centers to perform PAP more smoothly and with same techniques in each reference
centers. Site investigators will also collect CRKp isolates and keep these isolates in
appropriate conditions until time of transfer for analysis. All CRKp isolates will be sent to
the central microbiology laboratories in each country for identification of carbapenemase
genes by performing multiplex PCR (polymerized chain reaction).
Sample Size:
To best of our knowledge, there is no study investigating clinical outcomes of bloodstream or
other type of invasive infections caused by carbapenem hetero-resistant gram negative
bacteria in literature. Therefore, this study will be conducted as a pilot study.
Nevertheless, 200 participants for CRKp arm and 100 participants for carbapenem
hetero-resistant Klebsiella pneumonaie arm are planned to be involved.
Follow-up:
Participants will be evaluated for microbiological eradication on day 7 by control blood
cultures and cultures of primary infection source. If causative pathogen is not eradicated
within 7 days follow-up, consecutive cultures will be taken between 7-28 days as being
necessary. Patients will also be evaluated for clinical response on day-7 and day-14 by using
relevant parameters. All participants will be followed for 90 days after index blood culture
date. During this follow-up period, regular assessment starting from blood culture sampling
will be carried out and participants will be primarily evaluated for occurrence of any
infection (blood stream or other type of invasive infection) in once a month interval if the
participants are discharged. Participants will be warned to apply to our centres until the
completion of 90-day follow-up period when symptoms of infection develop (eg fever, chills).
Also, participants will be informed to call physicians who are primary investigators of
particular centre in this study when the participants arrive to hospital clinic or emergency
department. Primary investigators will evaluate participants and send their culture samples
according to clinical necessity. After review of the results of cultures and clinical
presentation, the patients will be allocated into infections with carbapenem resistant or
carbapenem hetero-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae groups. If the participant is discharged
before completion of the 90-days, he/she will be contacted in 30 days interval by telephone
call to appraise the investigated outcomes.
Microbiological Analysis:
- Antimicrobial susceptibility tests (AST) will be performed in each center and not be
repeated. Therefore, AST results will be obtained from hospital database.
- PAP (Population analysis profiling) will be performed in reference centers in each
country to identify actual hetero-resistant isolates among suspected isolates in which
some subpopulations within inhibition zone in gradient test (eg.E-test) or disk
diffusion test are identified
- Multiplex PCR will be used for identification of types of carbapenemase (will be
performed in reference centers)
- Whole genome sequencing will be used to identifiy molecular mechanisms of carbapenem
hetero-resistance in clinical isolates (will be performed in reference centers)
- Colistin resistance will be investigated by broth microdilution method (will be
performed in reference centers)
- EUCAST breakpoints will be used for identification of resistance against all antibiotics
except tigecycline in which FDA breakpoints will be applied.
- The results of antimicrobial susceptiblity and MIC values of carbapenems, colistin,
tigecycline, amikacin and gentamycin will be indicated for most resistant subpopulations
identified in PAP analysis. MIC values of aforementioned antibiotics will be analyzed in
reference centers by using broth microdilution method. For other antibiotics, AST
results of parental isolates will be recorded and obtained from hospital database.
Statistical Analysis:
Variables were described using median (interquartile range) or frequency count according to
the type of variable. The categorical variables will be compared by Pearson's chi-square or
Fisher's exact test if cells have a frequency of 5 or less and continuous variables by
Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney U tests for nonnormally distributed variables or Student's t test for
normally distributed variables. The groups (CRKp vs Carbapenem hetero-resisant) were compared
by using univariate analysis to define the variables that have significant difference between
comparison groups. All univariables with a P value of 0.20 or less will be included in the
multivariate Cox regression models by manually selecting them in a backward stepwise manner
according to clinical value and their association. VIF (variance inflation factor) will be
calculated for each variables incorporated into multivariate model. The best fit model will
be picked up according to likelihood ratio test. In another analysis comparing CRKp group and
carbapenem hetero-resistant group, a propensity score will be calculated and this score will
be incorporated into cox regression analysis model as a confounding parameter. Cox
reggression analysis will be applied to compare relevant outcomes such as 30-day mortality
and 14-day clinical cure rates.
Survival for 30 days from the first positive blood culture was plotted as Kaplan-Meier curves
and the rates of survival were compared by the log rank test to evaluate the effect of
carbapenem hetero-resistance. All tests were two-tailed, and significance was set at 0.05 in
SPSS software (version 20.0; SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA).
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05361135 -
18-fluorodeoxyglucose Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography in S. Aureus Bacteraemia
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02400268 -
Antibiotic Treatment Duration (7 vs 14 Days) Comparison in Blood Stream Infection Causes by Enterobacteriaceae
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04070820 -
Combination Treatment for Enterococcus Faecalis Bacteriemia Multicenter, Observational Study"
|
||
Completed |
NCT03147807 -
BetaLACTA® Test for Early De-escalation of Empirical Carbapenems in Pulmonary, Urinary and Bloodstream Infections in ICU
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05411315 -
Pragmatic Randomized Trial for Arterial Catheters in the Critical Care Environment
|
N/A | |
Enrolling by invitation |
NCT05880069 -
Clinical Outcomes in Patients With Infection by Resistant Microorganism
|
||
Terminated |
NCT04250168 -
Piloting Clinical Bacteriology in the Ebola Virus Disease Care Response
|
||
Terminated |
NCT04876430 -
Best Available Therapy With or Without Meropenem for Bloodstream Infections by Enterobacterales With High Level of Resistance to Carbapenems
|
Phase 2/Phase 3 | |
Completed |
NCT03255759 -
Actionable Results: Bloodstream Infection Molecular Assay Evaluation
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT03744728 -
Genotypic Versus Phenotypic Susceptibility Testing of Positive Blood Cultures
|
N/A | |
Terminated |
NCT00680459 -
Ethanol Locks for the Treatment of Central Venous Line Infections
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04839653 -
Efficacy and Safety of Selective Digestive Decontamination in the ICU With High Rates of Antibiotic-resistant Bacteria
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT03896893 -
Neonatal Bacterial Colonization Study
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05277350 -
A Study Investigating the Safety, Recovery, and Pharmacodynamics of Multiple Oral Administrations of SNIPR001 in Healthy Subjects
|
Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT00843804 -
Surveillance for Nosocomial Infections in Pediatric Cancer Patients
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT00467272 -
Catheter Related - Gram Positive Bloodstream Infections
|
Phase 2 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04658017 -
GARNETâ„¢ Filter (GARNET Device) IDE Used in Chronic Hemodialysis Patients With a Bloodstream Infection
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04710212 -
Screening for Colonization With Resistant Enterobacterales in Neutropenic Patients With Hematologic Malignancies
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT06271031 -
Process Mapping and Data Collection to Inform a Computer Simulation Model of Hospitalised Patients With Bloodstream Infection, Sepsis and Systemic Infection
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT03991793 -
Granzyme A in Patients With E. Coli Bacteremic Urinary Tract Infections
|