Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05841875 |
Other study ID # |
BIO.RAP |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
April 3, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
March 3, 2026 |
Study information
Verified date |
April 2023 |
Source |
Federal University of Minas Gerais |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The growing resistance of microorganisms to antimicrobials is a major threat to public health
nowadays. Reducing the consumption of antibiotics is one of the main strategies to control
this issue. Protocols using biomarkers to guide antimicrobial therapy have been studied, with
promising results in safely reducing patient exposure to these drugs by reducing duration of
treatments. Procalcitonin (PCT) and C-reactive protein (CRP) represent the most promising
biomarkers in this context. Although less studied, CRP has the potential advantages of lower
cost and wide availability when compared to PCT. However, decision algorithms involving
biomarkers proposed in studies published so far are very far from daily medical practice in
hospitals, mainly because there is poor accessibility to these protocols, and because most of
them do not contemplate each patients clinical variables. The objective of this project is to
evaluate the efficacy and safety of a multimodal protocol using clinical variables and the
CRP value to guide antibiotic therapy in hospitalized patients. This protocol will be applied
diretcly by the assistant medical teams through a digital clinical decision support tool
available in the form of an application for mobile devices developed by the research team.
Description:
The research team will perform a randomized, controlled, concurrent, open, single-center
clinical trial. The proposed intervention is the application of a protocol that uses clinical
variables and the CRP value to guide the duration of antibiotic therapy in patients with
suspected or confirmed bacterial infection. As for the control group, the duration of
antibiotic therapy will be suggested according to the best available evidence, considering
the primary site of infection and other characteristics of this process. For both groups, the
study protocol will be applied through a digital application for use on smartphones or
tablets, developed specifically for this project. Participants will be adults admitted to the
internal medicine ward of the Hospital das Clínicas of the Federal University of Minas Gerais
(HC-UFMG), for whom the assistant physician team has started antibiotic therapy in the last
72 hours. Patients will be allocated after signing a free and informed consent form.
Follow-up will be carried out until hospital discharge, death or 90 days, whichever occurs
first. The project was submitted for consideration to the Research Ethics Committee of the
Federal University of Minas Gerais (COEP-UFMG) and approved. As primary outcome, the duration
of antibiotic therapy will be evaluated for the infectious episode that motivated inclusion
in the study. Duration of antibiotic therapy will be measured by antimicrobial days (defined
by the aggregate of days a specific antimicrobial agent was administered to an individual
patient) per 1000 present days (defined by the length of time during which a given patient is
at risk for antimicrobial exposure at a given institution). As secondary outcomes, the
investigators will assess total exposure to antimicrobials, antibiotic-free days, user
satisfaction after using the digital tool, protocol adherence rate, length of stay, estimated
cost of antimicrobial therapy, all-cause hospital mortality, therapeutic failure, reinfection
rate, subsequent infections with multidrug-resistant microorganisms, Clostridioides difficile
infection.