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Children presenting for emergency department (ED) care with bloody diarrhea (i.e. hematochezia) represent a diagnostic challenge. Infectious enteric pathogens - Salmonella, Shigella and Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) - are at the top of the differential diagnosis list. STEC is of greatest concern because ~15% of infected children develop the Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS). Our team has demonstrated that antibiotic administration to STEC-infected children increases the risk of developing HUS while dehydration is associated with mortality. Rapidly identifying children with STEC infection can reduce unnecessary resource use in uninfected children while providing them to those with confirmed STEC infection. The study team will conduct a prospective ED-based study that will randomly allocate 60 children to either standard care as dictated by the treating physician or to the use of a 22-pathogen, nucleic acid based, 1-hour run time diagnostic test. The study team will evaluate the impact of testing on clinical resource use, clinical outcomes, costs and patient satisfaction.
Full description
Background:
The rapid identification of STEC-infected children will enable the provision of appropriate and timely care to such children. The rapid identification of other enteric pathogens (bacteria, virus, parasite) will enable the provision of targeted therapies as appropriate and the withholding of avoidable interventions. It will also provide information for clinicians to consider alternate, non-infectious etiologies as appropriate. The study team hypothesize that the BioFire FilmArray can be used selectively in children with hematochezia to identify children with STEC infection and therefore will expeditiously identify children in need of therapeutic interventions and those for whom blood testing, intravenous fluids, and follow-up visits are unnecessary. Knowledge of the etiology early in the course of disease will enhance the provision of a patient-level precision medicine approach to what is otherwise an ill-defined symptom.
Study Design:
The study team will prospectively identify children who present with hematochezia. Potentially eligible subjects will be identified by our Pediatric Emergency Medicine Research Associate Program (PEMRAP) and the Pediatric Emergency Research Team (PERT) nurses (ED coverage 14 hours per day). Eligible children will have ≥3 episodes of diarrhea within the preceding 24 hours and will have had blood identified in the stool (by physician, nurse or parent ). Eligible subjects will be approached by a PERT team member to obtain consent (and assent when appropriate). Once consent has been obtained, study participants will be randomized by a REDCap randomization tool to ensure allocation concealment (i.e. research team, ED physicians will be unaware until after enrolled into the study and randomized).
Children randomized to the standard of care arm will have demographic and clinical information collected and the treating physician will be informed to proceed as per their usual practice and treatment patterns. If stool is unavailable a rectal swab will be collected and sent to Calgary Laboratory Services (CLS) for routine culture. A routine stool specimen for back-up culture will still be requested as per standard of care. Home stool collection will be performed for those unable to provide a sample at enrolment and will be achieved by providing families with collection kits. Sample specimens may be stored at CLS as per routine procedures for standard clinical care. Following the completion of the visit, data regarding all testing, procedures, and medications administered will be collected. The family will be contacted 14 days later to collect outcome information (clinical and health resource use) and satisfaction. The medical records and select administrative databases may be reviewed to ascertain and confirm outcome data on Day 28.
Children randomized to the BioFire FilmArray arm will have the same data collected, but stool, if available, will be sent STAT to Calgary Laboratory Services (CLS) for the performance of the BioFire FilmArray test and routine culture. If stool is unavailable, a rectal swab will be performed and sent to CLS for the performance of the BioFire FilmArray test and routine culture. A routine stool specimen for back-up culture will still be requested as per standard of care once it is available. Sample specimens may be stored at CLS as per routine procedures for standard clinical care. The result of the BioFire test will be printed and brought to the ED where it will be provided to the ED physician for immediate review and management as appropriate. The result will be included in the ED chart for documentation purposes. Education regarding the interpretation of BioFire FilmArray results will have been performed in advance to all faculty members and a research team member will be available to answer any questions should they arise. We have worked with leaders at CLS including Drs. Gregson, Berenger and Vanderkooi who believe we should be able to receive a result within 2-3 hours of receipt of the specimen at CLS. Treatment decisions will be at the sole discretion of the ED treating physician who receives the result. Following the completion of the visit, data regarding all testing, procedures, and medications administered will be collected. The family will be contacted 14 days later to collect outcome information (clinical and health resource use) and satisfaction. The medical records and select administrative databases may be reviewed to ascertain and confirm outcome data on Day 28.
For those who decline consent, the study team will request consent to access select administrative data, Netcare and/or access to the child's medical records related to the illness to document interventions and outcomes in order to be able to assess bias by comparing participating and non-participating children in this study.
Objectives:
Primary Objective
Secondary Objectives
Significance:
The study team intend to determine new knowledge:
Potential child health improvements:
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60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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