Endocarditis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Individualized Diagnosis of Endocarditis and Its Therapy With a Focus on Infected Prosthetic materiAL
Infective endocarditis (IE) is a frequent and serious complication of implanted intracardiac prosthetic material, with a high morbidity and mortality. Therefore, this study aims to improve outcome of IE, with a focus on patients with intracardiac prosthetic material. In this study the investigators deal with research questions about both the diagnosis (microbiological, imaging, and expert opinion) and treatment of IE (with antimicrobial agents and surgical), in order to improve these clinical components and ultimately aim to improve outcome.
Rationale
Infective endocarditis (IE) is a frequent and serious complication of implanted intracardiac
prosthetic material, with a high morbidity and mortality. The number of procedures where
prosthetic material is implanted in the heart increases, as do the age and comorbidity of
treated subjects. In current clinical practice diagnosis of infected intracardiac prosthetic
material is often difficult because of the lack of sensitivity of the available diagnostic
armamentarium for IE.
As a general rule, first line treatment of intracardiac prosthetic material related
endocarditis consists of surgical prosthesis removal, combined with appropriate antimicrobial
therapy. The exception encompasses uncomplicated prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE). PVE
actually has a fair chance of successful medical treatment alone (>50%), depending on the
causative micro-organism. Although there is evidence and consensus with regard to the first
line treatment, surgical removal is not always possible because of its associated high risk,
technical limitations, or unwillingness of patients to undergo an invasive surgical
procedure. Second and third line treatments do not include surgery, and consist of
antimicrobial therapy with biofilm-penetrating agents during a predetermined timespan (second
line) or as life-long suppressive antimicrobial therapy (third line). These treatments are
the alternative in situations wherein first line treatment is not feasible or is unwanted.
Although not extensively investigated, these treatments are considered suboptimal.
Therefore further research is necessary. More research is needed to diagnose IE more accurate
and prompt, as current diagnostic criteria (the modified Duke criteria) for IE are
insufficient and as it is unclear how to best allocate non-invasive imaging techniques,
especially for intracardiac prosthetic material. More research is also needed to verify the
indications for and optimize the use of second and third line treatments in patients with
intracardiac prosthetic material.
Objectives
Primary
To define the diagnostic value of the combination of 18F-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose
fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18F-FDG PET) and electrocardiogram-gated
multidetector computed tomography angiography (ECG-gated MD-CTA) in patients suspected of IE,
in particular those with intracardiac prosthetic material, when added to the standard
diagnostic work-up for IE.
Secondary
- To define the predictive value of MD-CTA and 18F-FDG PET with regard to relapse rate and
mortality of IE;
- To identify sources of false positive and false negative results in MD-CTA and 18F-FDG
PET (e.g. the effect of the use of antimicrobial therapy on imaging findings);
- To identify the best MD-CTA and 18F-FDG PET scanning protocol;
- To define the role of 18F-FDG PET for finding other infectious lesions in the body;
- To assess and compare current clinical practices in patients with intracardiac
prosthetic material related infection when the foreign material cannot be removed; to
determine the outcomes of second and third line treatment as compared with first line
treatment, and to determine predictors of outcome;
- To investigate the potential of therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) to improve the
antimicrobial therapy in patients suspected of IE, in particular those with intracardiac
prosthetic material:
- for which peak and through blood concentrations should be aimed at in IE for
flucloxacillin, rifampicin, cefazolin, cefuroxime, ceftriaxone, amoxicillin,
penicillin; fluconazole, flucytosine, amphotericin-B?
- for which peak blood concentrations should be aimed at for gentamicin in IE?
- for which peak and through blood concentrations should be aimed at for vancomycin
in intracardiac prosthetic material related IE?
- for which through blood concentrations should be aimed at in IE for voriconazole?
- To investigate antimicrobial concentrations in resected cardiac tissue (e.g. heart valve
or vegetation which has been removed based on medical indication) in patients with IE
who have been treated medically with antimicrobials and who subsequently are operated
upon.
Study design
Prospective multicentre observation study, with the University Medical Center Groningen
(UMCG) in Groningen as the leading centre.
Study population
Patients (≥18 years) in which IE is suspected according to the britisch society for
antimicrobial chemotherapy (BSAC) criteria 2012.
Main study parameters/endpoints
Number of clinically identified (prosthetic material related) endocarditis episodes,
according to (multiple) constellation(s) of diagnostic criteria versus number of "true"
(prosthetic material related) endocarditis episodes, according to our gold standard "expert
opinion after 12 months (+/- 2 weeks) follow-up" (based on clinical reasoning, the modified
Duke criteria, and findings during surgery and from pathology).
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