- ICH GCP
- US Clinical Trials Registry
- Clinical Trial NCT02590198
Diagnostic Performance Comparison Between Procalcitonin-based vs. ANAES-based Guidelines (DIACORD)
Diagnostic Performance Comparison Between Procalcitonin-based vs. ANAES-based Guidelines; Impact on Antibiotic Use in Newborns With Suspected Early-onset Neonatal Infection (EONI)
Neonatal bacterial infection remains a serious pathology in industrialized countries despite the use of prophylaxis measures for group B streptococcus (GBS) (peri-partum antibiotic in women with GBS colonization), which was implemented in the United States in 1996 and in France in 2001 and has led to a dramatic decrease in the incidence of neonatal bacterial infections. However, early onset neonatal infection (EONI), which is defined as an infection occurring during the first 6 days after birth (as opposed to late onset neonatal infections (LONI) occurring between days 7-89), is still one of the leading causes of neonatal morbidity and mortality. Physicians consider EONI a significant diagnostic and therapeutic emergency due to the potential for sudden onset and rapid evolution of sepsis in newborns with immature immune systems. Currently, in France, detection of EONI is based on national consensus guidelines published in 2002 (ANAES recommendations). There are broad indications to provide empirical antibiotic treatment pending diagnostic confirmation through different complementary exams. To ensure that every infected newborn is diagnosed, biological assessments are often repeated and result in the use of invasive and painful procedures, anemia and financial concerns. Moreover, in cases of abnormal biological results, many newborns are subjected to intravenous (IV) antibiotic treatments requiring hospitalization and separation from their mother. However recent studies have shown that antibiotics can have a potentially deleterious effect on the neonatal digestive microbiota and result in the appearance of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, with possible long-term consequences on the health of the child.
Procalcitonin (PCT) is a calcitonin prohormone secreted from the parenchymal tissues. This marker of inflammation has been shown to be a valuable diagnostic marker for bacterial infection in adults and in children. It also seems to be a reliable marker for neonatal bacterial infection, which would make it useful in the detection of EONI. Because physiological levels of PCT vary during the first days of life, possibly due to postnatal intestinal bacterial colonization, levels of this marker are difficult to interpret in the early neonatal period. However, in a study of 2151 newborns with suspected EONI, Nicolas Joram et al. found that PCT obtained from the umbilical blood cord, prior to newborn intestinal colonization, bypasses this postnatal physiological peak of PCT and effectively constitutes a discriminant marker to distinguish between infected and healthy infants using a cutoff value of 0.6 ng/ml.
Subsequent to this pilot study, several studies on PCT in umbilical blood cord confirmed its good diagnostic performance for EONI, particularly when included in a diagnostic algorithm. This marker could contribute to a better estimation of EONI risk in order to limit the use of unnecessary complementary exams and prescription of antibiotics and their associated short- and long-term side effects in healthy newborns.
Therefore, in this study, the investigators propose to test the diagnostic value of a PCT-based algorithm in newborns suspected of having EONI. The investigators hypothesize that this algorithm is as efficient as those currently used (ANAES), but will limit coinciding biological exams and exposure to antibiotics during the neonatal period.
Study Overview
Status
Conditions
Intervention / Treatment
Study Type
Enrollment (Actual)
Contacts and Locations
Study Locations
-
-
-
Angers, France, 49933
- Angers University Hospital
-
Bordeaux, France, 33404
- Bordeaux University Hospital
-
Brest, France, 29609
- Brest University Hospital
-
Créteil, France, 94010
- Créteil Intercommunal Center
-
Lorient, France, 56322
- Lorient Hospital
-
Nantes, France, 44819
- Private clinic - Polyclinique de l'Atlantique
-
Paris, France, 75014
- Saint Joseph Hospital
-
Paris, France, 75010
- La Pitié Salpétrière Hospital (AP-HP)
-
Paris, France, 75010
- Robert Debré Hospital (AP-HP)
-
Paris, France, 75010
- Trousseau Hospital (AP-HP)
-
Poissy, France, 78300
- Poissy-Saint Germain Hospital
-
Poitiers, France, 86021
- Poitiers University Hospital
-
Rennes, France, 35033
- Rennes University Hospital
-
Tours, France, 37044
- Tours University Hospital
-
-
Participation Criteria
Eligibility Criteria
Ages Eligible for Study
- ADULT
- OLDER_ADULT
- CHILD
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Genders Eligible for Study
Sampling Method
Study Population
Description
Inclusion Criteria:
- All children born at > 36 weeks gestation in one of the 15 participating maternity or neonatology units and suspected having EONI according to the ANAES recommendations (clinical suspicion of chorioamnionitis, intrapartum maternal fever > 38°C, infected twin, spontaneous premature delivery at < 37 gestational weeks, prolonged rupture of membrane for > 12 hours, maternal group B Streptococcus colonization without full prophylactic antibiotic treatment, or signs of fetal asphyxia) will be included in the study.
- Oral Consent (Non Opposition).
Exclusion Criteria:
- Newborns will be considered ineligible if:
- Parental non opposition is not obtained, if the parents do not speak French, present severe dementia and/or cannot be reached on day 6.
- Nosocomial neonatal infection, severe congenital malformation or obstetrically explained neonatal asphyxia are diagnosed.
- Secondary parental opposition.
Study Plan
How is the study designed?
Design Details
Cohorts and Interventions
Group / Cohort |
Intervention / Treatment |
|---|---|
|
ANAES algorithm
Each center will start the study by applying the usual ANAES algorithm.
The date of implementation of the new algorithm based on PCT will be determined randomly.
Therefore, within each center, there will be an initial period in which the standard algorithm is applied and a second one during which the PCT-based algorithm is applied
|
care as recommended by ANAES, with ANAES algorithm
care based on PCT algorithm
|
|
PCT algorithm
Each center will start the study by applying the usual ANAES algorithm.
The date of implementation of the new algorithm based on PCT will be determined randomly.
Therefore, within each center, there will be an initial period in which the standard algorithm is applied and a second one during which the PCT-based algorithm is applied
|
care as recommended by ANAES, with ANAES algorithm
care based on PCT algorithm
|
What is the study measuring?
Primary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
|
Primary outcome is a composite outcome including: death from any cause, intensive care unit admission for any reason, disease-specific complications, diagnosis of EONI after maternity discharge, need for antibiotics with hospital readmission
Time Frame: 6 days after birth
|
The primary noninferiority endpoint is a composite of overall adverse outcomes induced by EONI occuring within 6 days following birth.
It includes death, Neonatal Intensive care Unit (NICU) admission, or hospital readmission.
The investigators chose this primary endpoint because the French definition of EONI diagnostic is subjective, specifically in case of possible EONI in case of gastric fluid positivity, and is finally rarely objectivated.
Moreover, the new PCT-based algorithm do not require any gastric fluid analysis and modify the usual French definition of possible EONI, impossible to use in this context.
Focusing on serious adverse event outcomes seems a very pragmatic and efficient methodologic strategy.
|
6 days after birth
|
Secondary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
|
death
Time Frame: Day 6 and Day 90
|
components of the primary outcome (death/NICU/rehospitalisation + antibiotics) will be considered independently, as is advised for a composite outcome.
|
Day 6 and Day 90
|
|
NICU admission
Time Frame: Day 6 and Day 90
|
components of the primary outcome (death/NICU/rehospitalisation + antibiotics) will be considered independently, as is advised for a composite outcome.
|
Day 6 and Day 90
|
|
rehospitalisation in connection with antibiotic treatment
Time Frame: Day 6 and Day 90
|
components of the primary outcome (death/NICU/rehospitalisation + antibiotics) will be considered independently, as is advised for a composite outcome.
|
Day 6 and Day 90
|
|
Inter-period frequency comparison of secondary adverse effect (SAE) and adverse effect (AE) related to antibiotics.
Time Frame: Day 6 and Day 90
|
Day 6 and Day 90
|
|
|
Number of blood samples induced by the 2 algorithms
Time Frame: Day 6 and Day 90
|
EONI diagnostic exams frequency for EONI induced by the 2 algorithms (number of blood samples)
|
Day 6 and Day 90
|
|
Number of newborns investigated by the 2 algorithms
Time Frame: Day 6 and Day 90
|
EONI diagnostic exams frequency for EONI induced by the 2 algorithms ( number of newborns investigated).
|
Day 6 and Day 90
|
|
Inter-period cumulated hospital stay length (including maternity stay)
Time Frame: Day 90
|
Day 90
|
|
|
clinical and biological description of EONI and LONI
Time Frame: 12 months
|
Description of EONI and LONI bacteriological epidemiology (No recent data in France and Europe): frequency, typology...
|
12 months
|
Collaborators and Investigators
Sponsor
Collaborators
Investigators
- Principal Investigator: GRAS-LEGUEN Christele, PU-PH, Nantes University Hospital
Study record dates
Study Major Dates
Study Start (ACTUAL)
Primary Completion (ACTUAL)
Study Completion (ACTUAL)
Study Registration Dates
First Submitted
First Submitted That Met QC Criteria
First Posted (ESTIMATE)
Study Record Updates
Last Update Posted (ACTUAL)
Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria
Last Verified
More Information
Terms related to this study
Additional Relevant MeSH Terms
Other Study ID Numbers
- RC15_0063
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.
Clinical Trials on Early-onset Neonatal Infection
-
prof. dr. Frans B. PlötzDutch Society of Pediatrics; Zorgevaluatie Nederland; Care4Neo; everywhereIMRecruitingEOS | Early-Onset Sepsis, NeonatalNetherlands
-
Jip GroenInBiomeRecruitingMicrobial Colonization | Neonatal Infection | Neonatal Sepsis, Early-Onset | Microbial Disease | Clinical Sepsis | Culture Negative Neonatal Sepsis | Neonatal Sepsis, Late-Onset | Culture Positive Neonatal SepsisNetherlands
-
Yale UniversityWithdrawnA Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial for Antibiotic Exposure in Neonatal Sepsis Using Neutrophil CD64Neonatal Early-onset Sepsis | Neonatal Late-onset SepsisUnited States
-
NICHD Neonatal Research NetworkEunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development... and other collaboratorsCompletedInfant, Newborn, Diseases | Early Onset Neonatal Sepsis | Early-Onset MeningitisUnited States
-
St George's, University of LondonMRC/UVRI and LSHTM Uganda Research Unit; MU-JHU CAREActive, not recruitingGroup B Streptococcus Carrier in Childbirth | Group B Streptococcal Infection, Late-Onset | Group B Streptococcal Infection, Early-Onset | Group B Streptococcus Neonatal Sepsis | Group B Strep InfectionUganda
-
St George's, University of LondonMRC/UVRI and LSHTM Uganda Research Unit; MU-JHU CARECompletedGroup B Streptococcus Carrier in Childbirth | Group B Streptococcal Infection, Late-Onset | Group B Streptococcal Infection, Early-Onset | Group B Streptococcus Neonatal Sepsis | Group B Strep InfectionUganda
-
St George's, University of LondonAssistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris; MRC/UVRI and LSHTM Uganda Research... and other collaboratorsRecruitingGroup B Streptococcus Carrier in Childbirth | Group B Streptococcal Infection, Late-Onset | Group B Streptococcal Infection, Early-Onset | Group B Streptococcus Neonatal Sepsis | Group B Strep InfectionFrance, Italy, Malawi, Netherlands, Uganda, United Kingdom
-
London Health Sciences Centre Research Institute...Not yet recruiting
-
Peking Union Medical College HospitalNot yet recruitingEarly-Onset Type 2 Diabetes
-
Ulrikka NygaardUniversity of Copenhagen; Innovation Fund DenmarkCompletedAntibiotic Side Effect | Early-Onset Neonatal SepsisDenmark
Clinical Trials on ANAES algorithm
-
University of ArizonaWithdrawn
-
Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute, Mount Sinai...Completed
-
University of California, San FranciscoEko Devices, Inc.CompletedAortic Valve Stenosis | Mitral Regurgitation | Heart Murmurs | Valvular Heart DiseaseUnited States
-
ResMedCompletedObstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA)Australia
-
ResMedRecruitingObstructive Sleep ApneaAustralia
-
Johann Wolfgang Goethe University HospitalHemoSonics LLCTerminatedHemorrhage | BleedingGermany
-
Ottawa Heart Institute Research CorporationActive, not recruitingMitral RegurgitationCanada
-
University of OxfordUnknownHeart Failure, SystolicUnited Kingdom
-
Columbia UniversityNational Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)Not yet recruitingModeling of Recruitment CurvesUnited States
-
Kıvanç AkçaHacettepe UniversityCompleted