Antibiotic Durations for Gram-negative Bacteremia (PIRATE)

November 18, 2019 updated by: Angela HUTTNER, University of Geneva, Switzerland

The PIRATE PROJECT: a Point-of-care, Informatics-based Randomized Controlled Trial for Decreasing Over-utilization of Antibiotic ThErapy in Gram-negative Bacteremia

Gram-negative bacteremia (GNB) is a frequent hospital & community-acquired infection, yet there is as yet no evidence from randomized studies on the optimal duration of antibiotic therapy. This point-of-care, multicenter randomized controlled non-inferiority trial will randomize 500 patients with GNB on day 5 of appropriate antibiotic therapy to either (1) a total of 7 days of antibiotic therapy, (2) a total of 14 days of antibiotic therapy, or (3) an individualized duration of antibiotic therapy (guided by the patient's clinical course & C-reactive protein levels). The primary outcome is the incidence of clinical failure at day 30.

Study Overview

Status

Completed

Conditions

Intervention / Treatment

Detailed Description

Antibiotic resistance continues to grow and is now considered to be one of the most serious global threats of the 21st century. The key driver of resistance is antibiotic overuse; long antibiotic courses select for resistance among the trillions of bacteria hosted by the human body. There is as yet no evidence from randomized studies on its optimal duration of antibiotic therapy. Traditionally, guidelines have somewhat arbitrarily recommended long courses of two weeks, even though patients with no structural complications may recover after only five days of therapy. Evidence is mounting that longer courses leave patients with multi-resistant organisms. Indeed, given rising concerns over resistance, many physicians have reduced antibiotic durations for GNB to 7 days with no apparent untoward consequences.

This point-of-care, multicenter randomized controlled non-inferiority trial will randomize 500 patients with GNB on day 5 of appropriate antibiotic therapy to either (1) a total of 7 days of antibiotic therapy, (2) a total of 14 days of antibiotic therapy, or (3) an individualized duration of antibiotic therapy (guided by the patient's clinical course & C-reactive protein levels). The primary outcome is the incidence of clinical failure at day 30. Patients will be followed through day 90; secondary outcomes will include the incidence of clinical failure on days 60 and 90, the total number of antibiotic days, the incidence of antibiotic-related adverse events (including Clostridium difficile infection), the emergence of bacterial resistance, length of hospital stay. Cost-effectiveness/health-economic analyses will also be performed.

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Actual)

504

Phase

  • Not Applicable

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Locations

      • Geneva, Switzerland, 1205
        • Geneva University Hospitals
    • Saint Gallen
      • St. Gallen, Saint Gallen, Switzerland
        • Cantonal Hospital St Gallen
    • Vaud
      • Lausanne, Vaud, Switzerland
        • Lausanne University Hospital

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

18 years and older (ADULT, OLDER_ADULT)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Genders Eligible for Study

All

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Age ≥ 18 years
  2. Presence of Gram-negative bacteria in at least one blood culture bottle
  3. Treatment with a microbiologically efficacious antibiotic

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Immunosuppression (including HIV infection with CD4 cell count ≤500/µl, hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation in the first month after transplantation and at any time before engraftment, neutropenia in the 48 hours prior to randomization, receipt of high-dose steroids [>40 mg prednisone or its equivalent] daily for > 2 weeks) in the two weeks prior to randomization
  2. GNB due to the following complicated infections:

    • Endocarditis or other endovascular infection without a removable focus
    • Necrotizing fasciitis
    • Osteomyelitis or septic arthritis
    • Confirmed prostatitis
    • Undrainable abscess or other unresolved sources requiring surgical intervention (e.g., cholecystitis) at the time of enrollment
    • Central nervous system infections
    • Empyema
  3. GNB due to non-fermenting bacilli (Acinetobacter spp., Burkholderia spp., Pseudomonas spp.), Brucella spp., Fusobacterium spp., or polymicrobial growth with Gram-positive organisms
  4. Fever (≥38º C) or hemodynamic instability in the 24h prior to recruitment

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: TREATMENT
  • Allocation: RANDOMIZED
  • Interventional Model: PARALLEL
  • Masking: QUADRUPLE

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
ACTIVE_COMPARATOR: "Fixed long" antibiotic course
Patients randomized to this group will receive a "fixed long" antibiotic course of 14 days.
Only the duration of antibiotic therapy will be investigated in this study. (In all arms, the choice and mode of administration (IV vs. PO) of antibiotic(s) will be left to the patient's attending physician and consulting infectious disease specialist and thus will follow usual standards of care.)
EXPERIMENTAL: "Fixed short" antibiotic course
Patients randomized to this group will receive a "fixed short" antibiotic course of 7 days.
Only the duration of antibiotic therapy will be investigated in this study. (In all arms, the choice and mode of administration (IV vs. PO) of antibiotic(s) will be left to the patient's attending physician and consulting infectious disease specialist and thus will follow usual standards of care.)
EXPERIMENTAL: "Individualized" antibiotic course
"Individualized" antibiotic course: starting on day 5, therapy will be discontinued after the patient has been afebrile for 48 hours and the CRP level has decreased from its peak by at least 75%
Only the duration of antibiotic therapy will be investigated in this study. (In all arms, the choice and mode of administration (IV vs. PO) of antibiotic(s) will be left to the patient's attending physician and consulting infectious disease specialist and thus will follow usual standards of care.)

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Incidence of clinical failure in all arms
Time Frame: day 30 (with day 1 being the first day of microbiologically efficacious antibiotic therapy)

Clinical failure is defined by the presence of at least one of the following:

  • Relapse: a recurrent bacteremia due to the same bacterium occurring from the day of treatment cessation and until day 30
  • Local suppurative complication that was not present/apparent at infection onset (e.g., renal abscess in pyelonephritis, empyema in pneumonia)
  • Distant complications of the initial infection, defined by growth of the same bacterium causing the initial bacteremia (as determined by antibiotic susceptibility profiling)
  • The restarting of Gram-negative-directed antibiotic therapy after its initial discontinuation due to clinical worsening suspected to be due to the initial infecting organism and for which there is no alternate diagnosis/pathogen suspected
  • Death due to any cause through day 30
day 30 (with day 1 being the first day of microbiologically efficacious antibiotic therapy)

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Incidence of clinical failure in all arms
Time Frame: day 60

Clinical failure is defined by the presence of at least one of the following:

  • Relapse: a recurrent bacteremia due to the same bacterium occurring from the day of treatment cessation and until day 30
  • Local suppurative complication that was not present/apparent at infection onset (e.g., renal abscess in pyelonephritis, empyema in pneumonia)
  • Distant complications of the initial infection, defined by growth of the same bacterium causing the initial bacteremia (as determined by antibiotic susceptibility profiling)
  • The restarting of Gram-negative-directed antibiotic therapy after its initial discontinuation due to clinical worsening suspected to be due to the initial infecting organism and for which there is no alternate diagnosis/pathogen suspected
  • Death due to any cause through day 30
day 60
Incidence of clinical failure in all arms
Time Frame: day 90

Clinical failure is defined by the presence of at least one of the following:

  • Relapse: a recurrent bacteremia due to the same bacterium occurring from the day of treatment cessation and until day 30
  • Local suppurative complication that was not present/apparent at infection onset (e.g., renal abscess in pyelonephritis, empyema in pneumonia)
  • Distant complications of the initial infection, defined by growth of the same bacterium causing the initial bacteremia (as determined by antibiotic susceptibility profiling)
  • The restarting of Gram-negative-directed antibiotic therapy after its initial discontinuation due to clinical worsening suspected to be due to the initial infecting organism and for which there is no alternate diagnosis/pathogen suspected
  • Death due to any cause through day 30
day 90
Incidence of all-cause mortality in all arms
Time Frame: day 90
incidence of all-cause mortality
day 90
Incidence of Clostridium difficile infection in all arms
Time Frame: day 90
incidence of symptomatic C. difficile infection in all arms
day 90
Incidence of emergence of resistance to the study antibiotic in all arms
Time Frame: day 90
The incidence of emergence of resistance in micro-organisms recovered in clinical specimens (whether colonizers or etiologic agents of the gram-negative bacteremia) in all arms
day 90

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Sponsor

Collaborators

Publications and helpful links

The person responsible for entering information about the study voluntarily provides these publications. These may be about anything related to the study.

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start (ACTUAL)

April 27, 2017

Primary Completion (ACTUAL)

June 11, 2019

Study Completion (ACTUAL)

August 26, 2019

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

March 29, 2017

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

March 29, 2017

First Posted (ACTUAL)

April 4, 2017

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (ACTUAL)

November 19, 2019

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

November 18, 2019

Last Verified

November 1, 2019

More Information

Terms related to this study

Other Study ID Numbers

  • 2017-00108

Plan for Individual participant data (IPD)

Plan to Share Individual Participant Data (IPD)?

NO

IPD Plan Description

(There is no plan to share IPD.)

Drug and device information, study documents

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product

No

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product

No

product manufactured in and exported from the U.S.

No

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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