Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Clinical, Inflammatory, and Economic Impact of Dextran 70 in Treating Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis
The core of the proposal is a prospective, randomized, double-blinded, controlled study
which will compare the efficacy of dextran 70 versus human albumin in the treatment of
cirrhotic patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP). Because dextran 70, which
is FDA approved for plasma volume expansion, is significantly less expensive than human
albumin, this study is designed and powered to determine if dextran 70 is equivalent in
clinical efficacy when compared to albumin.
Specific aims for this project are to:
1. Assess the effect of plasma volume expansion with dextran 70 on disease-specific
mortality at 30 days in cirrhotic patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
compared to plasma volume expansion with human albumin.
2. Assess the effect of dextran 70 compared to human albumin on the prevention of renal
dysfunction within 30-days of diagnosis of SBP, as measured by the calculated
creatinine clearance, plasma renin activity, serum aldosterone levels, levels of brain
natriuretic peptide, and further development of the hepatorenal syndrome in cirrhotic
patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.
3. Compare the survival to liver transplantation, treatment costs, hospitalization costs,
resource utilization, and quality of life of patients with spontaneous bacterial
peritonitis treated with dextran 70 and human albumin in the 30 days following
diagnosis.
4. Establish a comprehensive tissue bank of blood, ascites, and urine in patients with
spontaneous bacterial peritonitis for future testing and translational research.
5. Establish a clinical electronic database with web-based data entry and remote analysis
capabilities linking tissue bank samples and patient outcomes related to the above
clinical trials.
All patients admitted to the University of Virginia Health system who have clinically or
pathologically defined cirrhosis, laboratory evidence consistent with spontaneous bacterial
peritonitis and clinically or radiologically accessible ascites will be screened for
participation in this prospective,randomized, double-blinded, controlled trial. All patients
agreeing to participate will be treated with the standard of care antibiotic and supportive
therapy and will be randomized to one of two treatment regimens. Treatment arm one will
consist of human albumin, 1.5 g/kg intravenously administered at the time of enrollment and
1.0 g/kg administered on day three after enrollment. Treatment arm two will consist of
dextran 70, 1.0 g/kg intravenously daily for three days. Under separate informed consent
from the therapeutic portion of the study, all participants will be offered enrollment into
the tissue repository and prospective outcomes database. Upon consent to enroll in the
repository and database, serum, ascites, and urine will be collected from participating
subjects for storage and future evaluation of inflammatory and pathophysiologic factors
contributing to the morbidity and mortality of SBP and HRS. Prospectively collected clinical
and outcomes data will be recorded into a perpetual electronic database for future
comprehensive outcomes and translational studies. Participation in either the tissue
repository or perpetual clinical database will not be compulsory to enroll in the
therapeutic or prophylaxis trials. Similarly, subjects can choose not be enrolled in either
the database or tissue repository.
Comprehensive treatment costs incurred in both treatment arms will be collected
prospectively by study personnel and used to perform a formal cost-effectiveness analysis.
Micro-costing algorithms will be used to derive direct treatment and hospitalization costs
for the two treatment arms. After data collection is complete, along with the primary
statistical analysis, a subgroup analysis will be performed to better clarify if benefit
from either treatment arm is limited to high-risk patients or other specific patient
sub-populations. As the proposed project is the first prospective, randomized,
double-blinded investigation into two markedly different therapeutic options for treating
SBP, this study will offer the unique opportunity to study them in an objective fashion.
All participants in the study will receive standard of care antibiotic therapy and
supportive care for spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Prior to screening, a paracentesis
will have been performed and the resulting ascitic fluid sent to the lab for cell count and
bacterial culture. Ascites culture media will be inoculated at the bedside with at least
10ml of fluid per culture container. Once the diagnosis of SBP is established, the patient
will receive a complete history and physical examination, chest and abdominal radiographs,
ultrasound examination of the liver including Doppler exam of the hepatic veins, arteries,
and portal vein to evaluate for thrombosis, peripheral blood laboratory testing including a
complete blood count with differential, standard serum chemistry and electrolytes including
blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and creatinine, liver panel assay including aspartate
aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), total,
direct, and indirect bilirubin, prothrombin time (PT), partial thromboplastin time (PTT),
international normalized ratio (INR), plasma renin activity (PRA), serum aldosterone level,
and brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) level. Peripheral blood cultures will be obtained in
standard fashion as per institutional protocols with inoculation of blood and body fluid
samples directly into culture media at the bedside and similarly, central line blood
cultures will be obtained if applicable. Complete blood cell counts, serum chemistry, and
hepatic panels will be repeated at least daily for the first three days after diagnosis and
at least every other week thereafter until 30 days. Levels of PRA, aldosterone, and BNP will
be measured at study entry and on days two and three in the protocol, and again at day 30.
Baseline quality of life will be assessed at enrollment and at 30 days. If the subject has
consented to tissue banking, samples of blood, ascites, and urine will be collected and
prepared for storage by study personnel. Tissue banking samples will be collected at
enrollment, 3 days, and at 30 days from each participating subject.
After initial diagnostic paracentesis performed prior to enrollment, total paracentesis will
be performed (if not done on the initial paracentesis). Colloid replacement after the
initial paracentesis will be with the study drug.
Further therapeutic paracentesis will not be performed until after day three of the study
protocol. Diuretic therapy will be continued in patients with clinical fluid control
problems at the discretion of the medical team. However, diuretic use during the first three
days of the protocol will be closely recorded by study personnel. All subjects will be
placed on sodium-restricted diet, 2000 mg or less per day. All subjects not allergic to
cephalosporins will receive intravenous cefotaxime as per a dosing regimen based upon their
serum creatinine level. Patients with allergies or sensitivities to cephalosporins will
receive meropenem as per a dosing regimen based upon their serum creatinine level.
If ascites or blood cultures grow specific bacterial pathogens, antibiotic therapy will be
tailored to the narrowest spectrum antibiotic necessary for adequate coverage, based on in
vitro organism susceptibilities. If any ascites is still present, all subjects will have a
repeat diagnostic paracenteses at 48 hours after diagnosis for repeat of cell counts to
assess for response to therapy. If ascites and blood cultures are negative, antibiotic
coverage will be continued for a total of 5 days if clinical and laboratory resolution of
the infection is verified. If subjects do not respond to initial therapy as measured by
ascites PMN's not decreasing by 50% after the first 48 hours of treatment, the antibiotic
regimen will be modified empirically by the primary medical team caring for the patient.
Once resolution of the infection is established, after 5 days of initial therapy, all
patients will be placed on ciprofloxacin, 750 mg once weekly for prophylaxis which will be
continued indefinitely. If the patient is sensitive or allergic to fluoroquinolones,
trimethoprim / sulfamethoxazole 160/800 mg once daily for 5 days a week will be used.
Subjects randomized to treatment with human albumin will receive a total of 1.5 g/kg of
albumin at the time of enrollment and 1.0 g/kg on day three of the treatment protocol. To
maintain blinding, the research pharmacy will prepare the 25% albumin solution in order to
be identical in volume and color to the dextran 70 through the use of a dextrose diluent.
Because of the different dosing schedules between the two treatment arms in this study,
equivolume placebo doses of dextrose (5%) will be given on day two when an active treatment
dose is not scheduled in the albumin arm. Dextrose will be used to avoid the sodium load and
potential mild plasma volume expansion associated with saline infusion.
Subjects randomized to treatment with dextran 70 will receive it as a daily intravenous dose
for the three days of the treatment protocol. A total daily dose of 1.0 g/kg will be
administered. Because the hemodynamic compromise is often delayed by up to 48 hours after
the diagnosis of SBP, daily dosing of dextran-70, instead of a single dose regimen, is a
better pharmacokinetic treatment strategy in addressing the gradually worsening hemodynamic
status involved with the progression of SBP to HRS. In normal humans, 45-60% of the infused
dose of dextran-70 is recovered in the urine within 48 hours and the elimination half-life
is approximately 24 hours. As stated above, in order to preserve blinding, the albumin,
placebo, and dextran 70 treatment will all be equivolume and visually indistinguishable. An
intravenous multivitamin additive will be used in the dextran solution in order to assure
that the 6% dextran and 25% albumin solutions are of the same color. This multivitamin
diluent has been used successfully for the same purpose in other blinded studies at UVAHS
with no adverse events or known benefits associated from the multivitamin component.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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