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Diagnosis of Septicaemia by Detection of Microbial DNA in Blood in Severe Infections (EVAMICA)

A

Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Febrile Neutropenia
Endocarditis
Severe Sepsis

Treatments

Other: Detection of microbial DNA in blood by SeptiFast®
Other: detection of microbial DNA in blood by blood culture

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT00709358
P070308

Details and patient eligibility

About

The primary purpose is to improve and quicken the microbial diagnosis in severe infections, since only one third of the cases are documented by blood cultures and adequate anti-infective therapy in the 48 hours reduced mortality and morbidity.

Our hypothesis is that detection of microbial DNA in blood by real time PCR may increase the number of cases diagnosed for bacteraemia or fungemia and shorten the time to positive results, which will provide information for an adequate anti-infectious therapy.

Full description

We will evaluate the advantage of adding the molecular test to the microbial investigations usually done (blood cultures and others) in cases of febrile neutropenia, suspicion of infective endocarditis and severe sepsis in intensive care units.

This is a prospective study conducted in 18 sites (7 in the Paris area and 11 all over France) which will enrolled about 2000 patients over 18 years. Sites are randomized for starting with a 6-month period performing the test or 6-month period without the test (control time with the standard of care).

Primary outcome are the number of patients with documented bacteraemia or fungemia. Secondary outcome are (1) the number of patients with an adequate anti-infective therapy and how long it happens after the diagnosis, (2) mortality, (3) new complicated infection, (4) number of investigations (microbial and non microbial) done for the etiological diagnosis, and global hospitalization costs.

The advantage of the new test will be evaluated per protocol and with an intend to treat analyses. We hypothesized that the new test will bring 15% more microbial diagnosis than the standard of care. Consequently, and according to the number of sites interested in the study, 166 to 2500 patients will be enrolled with 480 to 750 patients with febrile neutropenia, 1000 to 1500 patients with severe sepsis in Intensive Care Units (ICU). Patients with suspicion of infective endocarditis will be evaluated for the number of diagnosis of true endocarditis according to Duke Criteria, and the time to diagnosis.

Health economic evaluation will compare the costs of hospitalization, microbial investigations including the new test, other non clinical investigations and consequences on the organization.

Enrollment

2,000 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age≥ 18 years
  • Written signed and dated inform consent
  • First time with fever observed in a neutropenic patient
  • Severe sepsis in a patient hospitalized in ICU
  • Suspicion of infective endocarditis
  • Microbial investigation from Monday to Friday

Exclusion criteria

  • Not affiliated to Health Insurance (social security)
  • Included in another interventional trial testing microbial DNA detection during the time "without Septifast®"
  • Included in another clinical trial for which the clinician assumes that it will not be possible to prescribe an anti-infectious therapy adequately to microbial detection in the blood
  • Patient previously included in the protocol
  • Sepsis with a microbial diagnosis

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

2,000 participants in 2 patient groups

2
Active Comparator group
Description:
Detection by blood culture
Treatment:
Other: detection of microbial DNA in blood by blood culture
1
Experimental group
Description:
Test LightCycler SeptiFast® (Roche)
Treatment:
Other: Detection of microbial DNA in blood by SeptiFast®

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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