Influenza Clinical Trial
Official title:
Oseltamivir Versus Paracetamol for Influenza-like Illness During the Influenza Season: a Randomized Controlled Trial
Parallel group, investigator initiated, 1:1, open-label, non-inferiority randomized controlled trial, aiming to show that paracetamol is non-inferior to oseltamivir among patients with serious acute respiratory infection (SARI).
Study setting: a single tertiary hospital, containing 1,000 beds. Intervention: best medical
care and oral oseltamivir 75 mg twice daily for five days.
Control: best medical care and oral paracetamol twice daily for five days. Dose adjustments
of oseltamivir will be made according to manufacturer's instructions. Patients with
creatinine clearance between 30-60 ml/minute will receive 30 mg twice daily for five days.
Patients with creatinine clearance 10-30 ml/minute will receive 30 mg, once daily for 5 days.
Hemodialytic patients will receive 30 mg upon admission, and 30 mg after every session, for 5
days. Patients on peritoneal dialysis will receive 30 mg once, which suffices for 5 days.
Patients may withdraw participation from the trial at any time. The attending physician may
also be informed the treatment arm, and start antiviral treatment if deemed necessary.
A nasopharyngeal swab for influenza will be obtained upon enrollment. PCR testing will be
performed in-house. Administration of oseltamivir or paracetamol for patients with negative
swabs will be stopped, unless the sample was obtained after initiation of the study drug.
Patients may discontinue or refuse trial medications at any point. The reasons for
discontinuation will be documented.
Adverse effects: The investigators will monitor and document daily rate of nausea, vomiting,
and headache, deterioration in kidney function (defined as an increase in creatinine by >0.3
mg/dl or by >50% from baseline), and in-hospital delirium.
Participant timeline and follow-up: After signing informed consent (available in Hebrew,
Arabic or Russian), study personnel, will interview patients and review electronic medical
files.
Patients enrolled will be followed-up daily by study personnel in-hospital, until the first
of: achieving clinical improvement (defined below), hospital discharge, or 7 days from
randomization. During the follow-up patients will be assessed for clinical improvement and
for AE (detailed above). Patients discharged before day 7 will be assumed to have reached
clinical improvement by that time. Readmissions and deaths by day 30 will be monitored
through the electronic patient file (Prometheus), providing access to a national registry of
hospitalizations and updated from the national Health Ministry on deaths.
Recruitment: during the influenza high-season, ER nurses will fill in a check-box containing
the SARI criteria items. An electronic report of all cases filling SARI criteria, will be
sent to study personnel 5 times daily. An investigator will apply inclusion and exclusion
criteria on candidates, and obtain informed consent from patients or their legal guardians.
Enrollment will continue until reaching the predefined sample size.
Randomization and blinding methods: a computer-generated randomizer will be used, to assign
all patients into block sizes of 8, with a 1:1 randomization rate. Allocation codes will be
concealed in sealed opaque envelopes that will be opened consecutively by the randomization
code. The study is open-label. Outcome assessment will be performed blinded to the treatment
allocation.
Patients will be assessed once daily, by study personnel, for the clinical course of the
disease and for AE. Data will be entered into a case report form (CRF). Daily assessment will
end when patients are released from hospitalization, or at the end of 7 days from admission.
During hospitalization, medical files will be reviewed for administration of antibiotics,
respiratory deterioration (defined as new requirement of oxygen supplementation or
requirement for mechanical ventilation, either invasive or non-invasive). Duration of
hospitalization, as well as re-hospitalization within one month after enrollment, and 30 days
mortality, available from the hospital computerized medical records, will be noted.
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