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Colistin can be used to treat the infection caused by carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae(CRE). In China, patients diagnosed with Hospital-acquired-pneumonia (HAP)or bloodstream infection caused by CRE are recruited, and randomly assigned to two groups, and in one group the patients accept treatment with colistin, however in another group, the patients accept treatment without colistin. The efficacy and safety of the treatment between the two groups are compared.
Full description
The study will be conducted in accordance with good clinical practice and with the guidelines set out in the Declaration of Helsinki. After approval from local and national ethics committees, patients diagnosed with Hospital-acquired-pneumonia (HAP)or bloodstream infection caused by CRE from 14 centres in China will be recruited. All patients will be randomized to receive treatment with or without colistin in the ICU. The purpose of this study is to investigate the efficacy and safety of colistin when used to treat patients with CRE infection. The primary outcome is 14-day all cause mortality and the second outcomes include 14-day clinical cure rate, 14-day efficacy rate, ICU free days within 28 days after randomization,14-day microbiological cure rate,incidence of adverse events and severe adverse events in first 14 days, hospital mortality, 28-day all cause mortality, ICU mortality. Clopper-Pearson method is used to calculate the 95% confidence interval of mortality, Miettinen and Nurminen method is used to detect the difference between the two groups.
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Inclusion criteria
Patients who can provide written informed consent or their informed consent can be provided by legal guardian
Patients who are hospitalized
Adults ≥18 years and ≤85 years of age
Patients suspected of or diagnosed with hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP, in a patient hospitalised for more than 48 hours or developing within 7 days after discharge from a hospital) or bloodstream infection caused carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae (CRE) based on the culture results of the sample collected 5 days before the randomization or rapid diagnostic detection.
Rapid testing of respiratory or blood specimens should be used to enable early identification of CRE infection pneumonia. Patients can be randomized based on the results of the rapid test while awaiting results of cultures from the local laboratory. However, if the sample does not grow CRE in the local microbiology laboratory culture, these patients will be withdrawn from the study drug treatment.
Patients with HAP should fulfil one of the following systemic signs: 1)Fever (temperature >38°C) or hypothermia (rectal/core temperature <35°C);2)White blood cell (WBC) count >10,000 cells/mm3, or WBC count <4500 cells/mm3, or >15% band forms and fulfil at least two of the following respiratory signs or symptoms:1)a new onset of cough (or worsening of cough);2)production of purulent sputum or endotracheal secretions;3)auscultatory findings consistent with pneumonia/pulmonary consolidation (e.g., rales, rhonchi, bronchial breath sounds, dullness to percussion, egophony);4)dyspnoea, tachypnoea or hypoxaemia (O2 saturation <90% or pO2 <60 mmHg while breathing room air).
Patients with bloodstream infection should fulfil one of the following criterion:1)fever(≥38 ℃);2)chills;3)hypotension(systolic <90 mmHg, requiring vasopressors to maintain mean arterial pressure ≥60 mmHg,decreased by 30mmHg from baseline) ,and isolation of CRE from at least two blood culture collected from two different sites.
Respiratory or blood specimen obtained for culture within 5 days prior to randomization, and after the onset of signs and symptoms of HAP or bloodstream infection (ideally before receipt of any systemic antibiotics).
Patients whose APACHE II score is between 10 and 30.
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404 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Jianfeng Xie, MD; Yingzi Huang, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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