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Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether new blood test (procalcitonin) can help to reduce unnecessary use of antibiotics in patients with unexplained fever.

Although fever is most commonly caused by bacterial infection there are multiple other conditions that can cause fever. It can be caused by viral infection. It can also be caused by other non infectious disease. Patients with malignancy, inflammation (such as gout or arthritis), or clots in veins can present with fever. Occasionally medications themselves can cause fever. If fever is not caused by infection antibiotics will not help. Instead they may cause side effects such as diarrhea and allergic reactions. We want to determine whether simple blood test (procalcitonin) can help us to make a difference between fever caused by infection and fever caused by others (above mentioned) non-infectious problems. We also want to determine whether such test would help us to reduce unnecessary antibiotic use and help us to find faster the real cause of the fever.

A total of 90 patients with the unexplained fever will be participating in this study. This study will involve single, additional blood test, performed only if patient continue to have fever despite a few days of investigations and therapy with antibiotics.

Patients will be assigned by drawing to one of two groups. In the first group blood test (procalcitonin) will help a doctor to decide whether to stop or continue antibiotics. If procalcitonin level is high antibiotics will be continued and the doctor will most probably order additional tests to determine the source of infection. If procalcitonin level is low serious bacterial infection is unlikely. The antibiotics will be stopped and a doctor will try to look for other cause of fever.

In the second group blood for the tests will be collected but not reported to a doctor. You will be treated in traditional manner by a doctor.

By following this procedure we will be able to determine whether therapy guided by procalcitonin level is as safe and possibly more effective than traditional approach. This study does not involve any other tests or study medications. We will attempt to contact all patients one month later by phone to determine whether you remain well after discharge.


Clinical Trial Description

Antimicrobial resistance has increasingly become a threat to patient safety in health care settings.1 Several studies have identified the inappropriate use of antimicrobials as important risk factor for antimicrobial resistance and the important area of opportunity for increasing patient safety and improving patient outcomes.2 High rates of antimicrobial use have been linked to high rates of antimicrobial resistance,3 and increased exposure to antimicrobials has been associated with an increased probability of colonization with resistant pathogens. It has also been shown that antimicrobial control results in significant cost savings4 and it may reduce antimicrobial resistance Surveys reveal that 25 - 33% of hospitalized patients receive antibiotics6 and that 22 - 65% of antibiotic use in hospitalized patients is inappropriate.7

Reasons for inappropriate antimicrobial therapy include:

1. treating anybody with fever (even when it is not caused by infection) with broad spectrum antibiotics

2. treating colonization or contamination (rather than real infection)

3. continuing antibiotics even when infection was cured or is unlikely8

It is quite clear that clinicians need reliable marker for bacterial infections that would allow an early diagnosis, inform about the course and prognosis of the disease and facilitate therapeutic decisions.9 Procalcitonin covers these features better as compared to other, more commonly used biomarkers (such as CRP).10 It has been shown recently that procalcitonin guidance substantially reduces antibiotic use in community-acquired pneumonia without compromising patients' safety. 11, 12 However, the efficacy and safety of PGAD in hospitalized patients with undefined fever has not been previously investigated.

We think that PGAD should be equally safe and effective intervention in hospitalized patients with fever of unknown etiology. It should help to reduce inappropriate antibiotic use and in effect, help to control antimicrobial resistance. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00398775
Study type Interventional
Source Changi General Hospital
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
Start date January 2007
Completion date September 2007

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