Wound Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Oral Flucloxacillin Alone Versus Flucloxacillin and Phenoxymethylpenicillin for the Emergency Department Outpatient Treatment of Cellulitis: a Non-inferiority Randomised Controlled Trial.
The main objective of this study is to investigate the non-inferiority of oral
flucloxacillin alone compared with a combination of oral flucloxacillin and
phenoxymethylpenicillin for the emergency department directed outpatient treatment of
cellulitis, wound infections and abscesses, recently renamed by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) as acute bacterial skin and skin structure infections (ABSSSIs). Half
of the trial participants will receive flucloxacillin and placebo in combination, and the
remaining half will be treated will flucloxacillin and phenoxymethylpenicillin.
In a secondary objective the trial aims to measure adherence and persistence of trial
patients with outpatient antibiotic therapy. In addition a within-trial evaluation of the
cost per quality adjusted life year (QALY) gained from the use of oral flucloxacillin
compared with combination therapy from the perspective of the health-care payer (direct
costs) the patient and government. Finally the study will externally validate the Extremity
Soft Tissue Infection-score, a Health Related Quality of Life (HRQL) questionnaire designed
to quantify the impact of cellulitis, wound infections and abscesses on patient HRQL in
clinical trials.
There is obvious clinical equipoise between the use of oral flucloxacillin alone or combined with phenoxymethylpenicillin for the emergency department treatment of cellulitis, wound infections and abscesses as evidenced by current disparate prescribing practice and hospital guidelines. Feasibility studies for the planned trial have shown that 45-50% of emergency department patients with these infections in Ireland are discharged on oral antibiotics which is consistent with findings in other jurisdictions. Despite the significant healthcare and economic costs associated with cellulitis, there is a paucity of scientific evidence concerning the appropriate antibiotic treatment for these conditions. Additionally, "less severe" infections tend to be over-treated and severe infections under-treated, indicating unjustifiable levels of antibiotic misuse, insufficient knowledge of therapeutics and a lack of evidence to risk-stratify patients with cellulitis to different treatments.The planned trial is therefore likely to be definitive due to the current clinical equipoise between the use of both penicillins for the emergency department outpatient treatment of this group of infections ;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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