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Clinical Trial Summary

The current IDSA/ATS guidelines recommend Linezolid and Vancomycin for MRSA coverage in hospitalized patients with pneumonia, which is common clinical practice in Italy. However, a nasal PCR-assay for MRSA has a high negative predictive value and can facilitate rapid antibiotic de-escalation, thereby avoiding unnecessary anti-MRSA treatments. The indiscriminate use of these drugs has contributed to the emergence of resistant S. aureus strains and has led to significant adverse effects, without providing any survival benefits. Additionally, it has increased hospital stays and associated costs. The proposed study aims to use this diagnostic tool to shorten empirical anti-MRSA treatment duration in pneumonia patients, focusing on reducing antimicrobial therapy days while measuring in-hospital mortality, length of stay and adverse drug event incidence.


Clinical Trial Description

BACKGROUND On the basis of current IDSA/ATS guidelines antimicrobial agents such as Linezolid and Vancomycin are commonly used in hospitalized patients as an empirical treatment in community acquired pneumonias (CAPs) particularly in hospital-acquired pneumonias (HAPs) and ventilator associated pneumonias (VAPs), suggesting the empiric use of such anti-MRSA agents for patients with specific risk factors (e.g. recent hospitalization, exposure to parenteral antibiotics and/or previous isolation of these organisms, in particular from the respiratory tract) while obtaining culture data. According to the 2023 annual report of the European Antibiotic Resistance Surveillance System (EARSS) there is a high prevalence of MRSA throughout the European territory, however, even in countries with high endemicity, the presence of MRSA has remained stable in the last years. In Italy, according to the National Antibiotic-Resistance Surveillance System AR-ISS, in 2021 the percentage of blood isolates MRSA isolates showed a reduction (29.9%) in the national territory, standing, however, at 33.6% in the Puglia region, a percentage higher than the European. In patients with pneumonia, the nasal PCR-assay for MRSA has a high negative predictive value (NPV), with the crucial implication that a negative result can be used to guide the antibiotic de-escalation, avoiding an improper empiric use of the anti-MRSA therapy. Data supporting the clinical validity of the use of the nasal swab for MRSA as a diagnostic tool for pneumonia are robust, in this regard, as stated by the IDSA/ATS guidelines and supported by numerous retrospective studies, anti-MRSA treatment can be avoided in case of negative result, especially in non-severe CAP, thus preventing the misuse of anti-MRSA drugs. The indiscriminate use of these drugs over time has considerably led to the selection of resistant strains of S. aureus such as Vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus aureus (VISA), heterogeneous VISA (hVISA) and Vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (VRSA). Furthermore, the high risk of adverse events given by the empirical use of anti-MRSA drugs should also be noted including, among others, nephrotoxicity and ototoxicity with vancomycin and bone marrow suppression and peripheral neuropathy with linezolid, without a gain in terms of survival and with longer hospitalization stays. In addition, the systematic use of such drugs is associated with an increase in hospital costs, where the PCR assay for MRSA has a relevant role. According to a study conducted by the Stanford University in 2021, enabling antibiotic de-escalation within 24h, its use has of facts led to a cost saving of vancomycin of $40.33 per patient. On these assumptions, it is clear that using the nasal swab for MRSA in pneumonia diagnosis avoids the use of expensive drugs giving a large impact on health costs, while also reducing the risk of iatrogenic toxicity, hospital stay days and the duration of ventilation in VAPs. The aim of our study is to implement the use of the nasal swab for MRSA as a diagnostic tool reducing the duration of the empirical anti-MRSA treatment in the population of hospitalized patients with pneumonia. METHODS AND PROCEDURES. This will be a prospective, randomized single-center controlled study conducted in the Azienda Consorziale Policlinico di Bari. The minimum sample size is 38 patients per group, for a total of 76 subjects, calculated assuming a standard deviation of 10, a power of 90% and a type I error of 5%. The study will involve two phases: a first phase of enrollment of the subjects, with the collection of informed consent, of the anamnestic and personal data, a phase of randomization with consequent execution, within 48h from the start of the anti-MRSA empirical therapy, of the nasal swab for MRSA in the experimental group of patients. In a second step, the research assistants will continue the follow-up of the subject with cessation of the empiric treatment in case of negative result of the swab. The implementation of these steps will be ensured by the performance of the tasks foreseen for each unit. Each clinical unit will: - Enroll patients and collect demographic, clinical, and biochemical data at baseline, as well as ensure their management according to guidelines and scientific evidence for the entire duration of the follow-up; - Perform a nasal swab for MRSA in patients in the experimental group and discontinue the empirical anti-MRSA therapy if the nasal swab result is negative. - For both arms, follow-up visits will be on day 2, 5, 7, 14, and 28 relative to the enrollment visit (day 0). At the control visits, data will be collected on the clinical course of pneumonia and laboratory tests. After discharge, the visit can also be conducted by telephone. For more precision, eligibility criteria and primary and secondary outcomes descriptions are fully detailed in the corresponding sections. TIMELINE The research project will have a duration of 12 months following the approval of the Ethics Committee of the University of BarI. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS The sample size is estimated based on the main outcome measure (duration of antibiotic intake), which the investigators assume to have an average of 10 days in the control group and 2 days in the experimental group. Assuming a standard deviation of 10, a power of 90%, and a type I error of 5%, it is necessary to enroll a minimum of 34 patients per group (thus a total of 68 patients) in order to demonstrate a reduction from 10 to 2 days in the duration of antibiotic intake. To this is added an estimated 10% of cases lost to follow-up, resulting in a final sample size of 76 patients. The statistical analysis will be conducted according to the intention-to-treat approach. In case of contamination between the two treatment groups (which is considered unlikely in this case), an analysis per protocol will also be performed and the conclusions of the study will take into account the results of both. Numerical data will be summarized as mean and standard deviation, while categorical data as absolute and relative frequency. The two groups will be compared with the Student's t-test (numerical data) and with the Chi-Square test or Fisher's test (categorical data). The effects will be expressed as mean difference or relative risk, accompanied by a 95% confidence interval. All tests will be two-tailed, and a p-value lower than 0.05 will be considered significant. The statistical analysis will be carried out with R software version 4.3 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06238297
Study type Interventional
Source University of Bari Aldo Moro
Contact
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date February 10, 2024
Completion date February 10, 2025

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