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In this randomized controlled open-label trial, conducted in 7 French Pediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care Units (ICUs), investigator team hypothesize that the use of a procalcitonin (PCT)-guided algorithm to discontinue antibiotic treatment will decrease antibiotic duration in critically ill children treated for a suspected or proven bacterial infection. Two hundred and ninety-six eligible patients will be randomly assigned in two groups: either PCT-guided or standard-of-care antibiotic discontinuation, and monitored over 28 days, until the end of their hospitalization, or up to the end of antibiotic treatment for bacterial infection recurrence occurring up to 28 days after the day of randomization.
Full description
Infections are widespread in Pediatric and Neonatal ICU, and antibiotic treatments widely used. Long courses of antibiotic treatment increase the duration of hospitalization and are associated with changes in the microbiome, emergence of multidrug resistant organisms, and antibiotic-associated adverse events. In Pediatric and Neonatal ICU, PCT has a high negative predictive value to rule out bacterial infection. Thus, in sepsis patients and patients who initially appear to have sepsis but whose final diagnosis of bacterial infection is not retained, the use of a PCT-guided algorithm may be of value to shorten antibiotic duration without increasing infection recurrences. The algorithm has provided strong evidence of efficacy and safety among critically ill adults, excluding immunocompromised patients, patients with cystic fibrosis, and infections requiring prolonged antibiotic therapy. Similar data in critically ill children are lacking. A Spanish team from Sant Joan de Déu published three prospective non-randomized studies in Pediatric ICU (PICU), with encouraging results. Only one American randomized controlled trial (RCT) has been published in PICU with mixed results. One RCT is ongoing in India. Thus, our study will be the first French RCT to study the use of a PCT-guided algorithm to de-escalate antibiotic therapy in PICU, in order to provide evidence of efficacy and safety of such an algorithm in critically ill children with a suspected or proven bacterial infection. In addition, investigator team will also study the economic impact of a PCT-guided algorithm which has never been done before.
In the PCT-guided arm, PCT dosage will be done at Day 0 (day of randomization) and Day 1, and then every 48 hours until cessation of antibiotics in hospital or discharge from hospital if the patient is discharged with an antibiotic treatment. Antibiotic treatment will be stopped according to PCT value and patient clinical evolution. In the control group, antibiotic duration will be determined by usual practices based on guidelines. Inpatient evaluations will be conducted every day so long as patients receives antibiotics in hospital and usual clinical, biological and/or radiological monitoring will be conducted in both groups. To monitor infection recurrence occurring up to 28 days after the day of randomization and antibiotic-related adverse events, an evaluation will be conducted at the end of hospitalization, another at Day 28 (Day 0 = day of randomization), and a last at the end of antibiotic treatment bacterial infection recurrence, if the patient is discharged from hospital on or before Day 28 and is still treated with antibiotics for a bacterial infection recurrence at Day 28, or if the patient is discharged from hospital after Day 28 and is still treated for recurrence on the last day of hospitalization with antibiotics for a bacterial infection recurrence.
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296 participants in 2 patient groups
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Romain AMADIEU, MD; Gwennaëlle ALPHONSA
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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