| Literature DB >> 25623485 |
Patrick N A Harris1, Anton Y Peleg2, Jon Iredell3, Paul R Ingram4,5, Spiros Miyakis6, Andrew J Stewardson7, Benjamin A Rogers8, Emma S McBryde9, Jason A Roberts10, Jeff Lipman11, Eugene Athan12, Sanjoy K Paul13, Peter Baker14, Tiffany Harris-Brown15, David L Paterson16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli or Klebsiella spp. frequently cause bloodstream infections. There has been a worldwide increase in resistance in these species to antibiotics such as third generation cephalosporins, largely driven by the acquisition of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase or plasmid-mediated AmpC enzymes. Carbapenems have been considered the most effective therapy for serious infections caused by such resistant bacteria; however, increased use creates selection pressure for carbapenem resistance, an emerging threat arising predominantly from the dissemination of genes encoding carbapenemases. Recent retrospective data suggest that beta-lactam/beta-lactamase inhibitor combinations, such as piperacillin-tazobactam, may be non-inferior to carbapenems for the treatment of bloodstream infection caused by extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producers, if susceptible in vitro. This study aims to test this hypothesis in an effort to define carbapenem-sparing alternatives for these infections. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25623485 PMCID: PMC4311465 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-014-0541-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Proposed participating sites
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| Australia - Queensland | Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital |
| St. Andrew’s War Memorial Hospital | |
| Brisbane Private Hospital | |
| Princess Alexandra Hospital | |
| The Mater Hospital | |
| Australia - New South Wales | Westmead Hospital |
| Wollongong Hospital | |
| Australia - Victoria | The Alfred Hospital |
| Monash Medical Centre | |
| The Austin Hospital | |
| Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre | |
| Dandenong Hospital | |
| Barwon Health | |
| Australia - Western Australia | Royal Perth Hospital |
| New Zealand | North Shore Hospital, Auckland |
| Middlemore Hospital, Auckland | |
| Singapore | National University Hospital, Singapore |
| Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Singapore |
Dose adjustment for study antibiotics
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| Creatinine clearance > 50 mL/min | No change | No change |
| Creatinine clearance 26 to 50 mL/min | 1 g every 12 hours | 4.5 g every 8 hours |
| Creatinine clearance 10 to 25 mL/min | 500 mg every 12 hours | 4.5 g every 12 hours |
| Creatinine clearance < 10 mL/min | 500 mg every 24 hours | 4.5 g every 12 hours |
| Haemodialysis | 500 mg every 24 hours and 500 mg after each dialysis | 2.25 g every 8 hours and an additional 0.75 g after each dialysis |
| Peritoneal dialysis | 500 mg every 24 hours | 2.25 g every 8 hours |
| Continuous-renal replacement therapy | 1 g every 12 hours | 4.5 g every 8 hours |
Figure 1Patient stratification at enrolment.
Data collection
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| Demographic data | Age, gender, ethnicity, long-term residential care status, ward location |
| Trial characteristics | Date of screening and enrolment, inclusion criteria and consent details, date and time of randomization |
| Co-morbidities and risk factors | Charlson score, co-morbid conditions, date and type of any surgery within 14 days, use of cytotoxic chemotherapy, immune suppressive medication, radiotherapy, biological agents (for example, monoclonal antibody therapy), presence of intravascular devices or urinary catheters; use of ‘not for resuscitation’ order |
| Infection parameters | Bacteraemia acquisition status (community, healthcare-associated or hospital-acquired infection), presumed source of infection, ICU admission, Pitt bacteraemia score, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II score (if in ICU) |
| Antibiotic data | From 48 hours prior to blood culture collection and up to 30 days; dose/route/frequency recorded |
| Clinical observations | Daily vital signs, (highest temperature, HR, RR; lowest systolic BP), lowest arterial pCO2 (if ventilated), white cell count, use of pressors; recorded days 1 to 7; patient weight |
| Microbiological data | Date and time of initial blood culture, full susceptibility profile, daily blood culture results days 1 to 3; any further positive blood cultures and species identification/resistance profile; other clinical sites growing |
| Outcome data | Survival at 7 and 30 days post randomisation |
| Date of death or discharge | |
| Length of hospital stay | |
| Days to clinical and microbiological resolution | |
| Clinical and microbiological success at day 4 | |
| Microbiological resolution or relapse | |
| Protocol violations and adverse events | |
| Reasons for study withdrawal |
Abbreviations: BP blood pressure, HR heart rate, RR respiratory rate.