Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
The main objectives of the study are
Full description
Background. Upper urinary tract infections (UTIs) are common in children, but attitudes toward the diagnosis and the acute treatment are heterogeneous among pediatricians and pediatric nephrologists. In effect the choice of antibiotic regimens is largely empirical and based on local practice, with no rationale for the choice of oral or parenteral administration. A retrospective study (1993-97) showed that in 1333 (36 % M) hospitalized children because of a prove UTI, parenteral antibiotic was given initially to 756 (57.2%) of the population studied.
We are aware of a unique randomized clinical trial, which has shown no differences in the short term (mean time to defervescence) and long term outcomes (symptomatic reinfections and renal scarring) of children receiving oral cefixime for 14 days versus vs initial iv cefotaxime for 3 days, followed by oral cefixime for 11 days.
The management of patients with UTI consists not only in antibiotic treatment of acute episodes, but also in the global evaluation of any risk factors. Current recommendations for imaging of the urinary tract are not based on prospective studies of outcomes (development of renal scars). A recent publication (Hoberman et al) suggests that renal ultrasonography and DMSA scanning at the time of acute illness are of limited value and recommends the routine use of voiding cystourethrography to identify children with reflux.
Aims.
Main objective of the study is:
Secondary objectives of the study are:
Study design. A randomised, controlled, open-label, 2-armed, parallel-group study comparing the safety and efficacy of oral antibiotic (10 days of amoxicillin + clavulanic acid 50 mg/Kg/day), vs initial iv treatment (ceftriaxon 50 mg/Kg/day until defervescence) followed by oral treatment (amoxicillin + clavulanic acid) for a total of 10 days, in children with a first episode of UTI.
Criteria for the diagnosis of upper UTI upon entry
Urinalysis (two concordant consecutive tests)
Urine culture (two concordant consecutive tests)
Fever higher than 38°C (NB: in the first 6 months of life fever is not an essential criterion)
Inflammation indices in the first 48 hours ESR higher than 30 and/or C-reactive Protein more than 3 times the upper limit of normal values
Neutrophils higher than the normal values for age
The diagnosis of upper UTI is made by presence of criteria 1, 2 and at least two of the others.
Assuming that 15% of children with pyelonephritis and treated iv will develop renal scars at the 12 month DMSA, defining efficacy as an incidence of 10% per group and setting alfa error = 0.05 and power = 80%, 220 patients per group (i.e. a total of 440 patients) are required.
The computer generated randomization list is stratified for hospital, sex and age (< o > than 2 years) and based on variable blocks of 10 or more.
Primary end points are:1. Duration of fever (>38°), 2. Sterilization of the urine, 3. Reduction of the blood inflammatory indices, 4. Incidence of renal scarring documented at 12 month.
The imaging diagnostic work-up is as follow: sonography (US) of the kidney and the bladder and DMSA renal scintigraphy within 10 days from onset of antibiotic treatment and at the end of the study (12 months), voiding cystourethrography (VC) 1-2 months after UTI.
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal