Status
Conditions
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
The goal of this observational study is to learn more about severe community-acquired pneumonia (sCAP) in adults who need hospital or intensive care. This type of pneumonia starts outside the hospital and can quickly become life-threatening. The study aims to understand how people with sCAP are cared for in different parts of the world and how these differences relate to their recovery.
This study will not test any new drugs or procedures. Instead, researchers will observe the care that participants already receive as part of their normal treatment. Hospitals in many countries will take part, including centres in Europe, North America, Latin America, Asia, Africa, and Oceania. This global participation will help show how sCAP affects people in different health systems and communities.
Participants will be adults who arrive at a hospital or intensive care unit with severe pneumonia. Most information will come from medical records, such as symptoms, test results, treatments given, and how participants respond to care. In some hospitals with special laboratory capacity, additional blood or breathing samples may be collected to study how the body fights infection.
No extra visits are required for routine data-only participants. In sites that collect samples, these will usually be taken at the same time as routine medical care to avoid extra procedures. Researchers will also ask about recovery after hospital discharge at 60 days, 6 months, and 12 months. These follow-ups will help us understand long-term health, complications, and quality of life after sCAP.
By collecting information from a large number of hospitals around the world, this study hopes to identify patterns that can help improve diagnosis, treatment, and survival for people with severe pneumonia. The findings may also help health care teams and public health leaders update treatment guidelines and strengthen care for future patients.
Full description
Severe community-acquired pneumonia (sCAP) is a life-threatening infection requiring hospital or ICU care. Mortality remains high, and there are major differences worldwide in diagnosis, treatment practices, and availability of resources. Although new international guidelines exist, real-world implementation is not well understood. The PLENITUDE study is a multinational, prospective observational cohort designed to describe global practices, outcomes, microbiology, and biological responses in adults with sCAP using a harmonized research framework.
The study uses a tiered approach aligned with the ISARIC/WHO Clinical Characterisation Protocol. Tier 0 sites collect standardized clinical data from routine medical records. Tier 1 sites also collect a single set of biological samples at admission. Tier 2 sites perform serial biological sampling to evaluate pathogen dynamics and host immune responses over time. This structure allows participation from hospitals with varying levels of resources while preserving core standardization.
Data are collected using variables derived from the ISARIC ARC library to ensure consistency across regions. Clinical information includes demographics, comorbidities, illness severity, laboratory and imaging results, respiratory support, microbiology, treatments, complications, and outcomes. All data are entered into a secure REDCap platform with automated validation rules, range checks, and logic checks. Participant confidentiality is maintained through unique study identifiers and restricted access for authorized personnel.
Quality assurance procedures include programmed data validation, periodic monitoring of completeness and protocol adherence, and selective source data verification. Standard Operating Procedures guide patient identification, sample handling, data entry, and reporting of deviations. Site teams receive training in protocol operations and data management.
Tier 1 and Tier 2 samples follow standardized processing steps based on the ISARIC/WHO CCP, including centrifugation, aliquoting, freezing, and safe handling according to biosafety requirements. Regional laboratory hubs support advanced analyses such as molecular pathogen detection, sequencing, and immune response profiling, improving comparability and quality control across participating countries.
The statistical analysis plan includes descriptive summaries of clinical presentation and management, comparative analyses across regions or guideline adherence groups, multivariable models for risk factor identification, time-to-event analyses, and mixed-effects models for repeated measures in Tier 2. Unsupervised clustering will be used to explore phenotypes and endotypes. Missing data will be addressed using multiple imputation and sensitivity analyses.
Participants are followed during hospitalization and after discharge at 60 days, 6 months, and 12 months to evaluate long-term outcomes, readmissions, persistent symptoms, and quality of life. Follow-up methods include record review and phone or electronic assessments, depending on site capability.
The study is overseen by international Principal Investigators, a Steering Committee of experts, and a centralized data management team. PLENITUDE is expected to generate real-world evidence on global sCAP management, guideline adherence, microbial and immune patterns, and long-term outcomes. These findings may inform improvements in clinical care, strengthen public health strategies, and support future advances in precision medicine for severe pneumonia.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
2,588 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Luis Felipe Reyes, MD, MSc, PhD; Lina Martinez-L, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal