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PCT Guided Stopping of Antibiotic Therapy in Children With Sepsis

A

All India Institute Of Medical Science (AIIMS)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Procalcitonin
Antimicrobial Resistance
AMR
Antibiotic Use
PCT
Septic Shock
Sepsis

Treatments

Behavioral: PCT group

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03388944
IEC-531/11.11.2016

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators' objective is to compare the risk of treatment failure* in children admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) with sepsis and managed by procalcitonin guided therapy for stopping of antibiotics ('PCT- guided therapy' group) with those managed with standard practices based on the evidence based guidelines ('control' group).

Children with suspected or proven sepsis will be randomized to the PCT guided group or the standard practices group and will be followed up for the outcome measures that include treatment failure and mortality. The investigators plan to enroll 560 patients over a period of 3 years. The investigators believe that the proposed study will provide the answer to reducing unnecessary antibiotic usage in the PICU without causing any harm to the patient in the form of treatment failure and/or mortality.

Full description

Sepsis and bacterial infections account for more than 50% of and intensive care (ICU) admissions and the mortality rates are as high as 40-60% reported in various studies. Although, antibiotics are crucial in deciding outcomes in children with sepsis, however, use of the same in non-infectious conditions has resulted in emergence of multi drug resistant strains with high morbidity and mortality. The number of deaths from antibiotic resistant bacteria is 700000 worldwide. A major driver for development of multi drug resistant bacteria is antibiotic use. This indiscriminate use is much more pronounced in the ICUs with observations from various studies indicating that 30% to 60% of antibiotics prescribed in ICUs are unnecessary, inappropriate, or suboptimal. This is because of two major reasons a) illness severity and b) difficulty in distinguishing true sepsis from other causes of SIRS. In order to address these problems, researchers have tried to explore the use of novel biomarkers to improve the accuracy, early diagnosis and stopping of antibiotic therapy of sepsis. One such marker that is widely studied is procalcitonin (PCT). Several studies and meta-analyses have demonstrated that PCT has excellent diagnostic accuracy for sepsis and has a potential role in de-escalating antibiotic therapy in adult patients. Unfortunately, there are only few observational studies and two RCT's in children published till date evaluating the use of PCT for diagnosis of infections or de-escalation of antibiotic therapy. Moreover, till date, there are no studies in critically ill children with sepsis who are faced with the problem of multidrug resistant infections and have the worst outcomes. Given this background, the investigators plan to conduct this pragmatic randomized controlled trial in children with sepsis admitted to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) and already on antibiotics. The investigators' objective is to compare the risk of treatment failure in children admitted to the PICU with sepsis and managed by PCT guided therapy for stopping of antibiotics ('study' group) with those managed with 'standard practices' based on the evidence based guidelines ('control' group). Children with suspected or proven sepsis will be randomized to the PCT guided group or the standard practices group and will be followed up for the outcome measures that include treatment failure and mortality. The investigators' would also be comparing the duration of antibiotic therapy between the two groups as secondary outcome measures. The investigators plan to enroll 560 patients over a period of 3 years. The investigators believe that the proposed study will provide the answer to reducing unnecessary antibiotic usage in the PICU without causing any harm to the patient in the form of treatment failure and/or mortality. The investigators also believe that in due course of time, over the years, with restricted antibiotic usage, the issue of multi-drug resistant microbial infections in the PICU will be addressed.

Enrollment

561 patients

Sex

All

Ages

2 months to 17 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Children 2 month to 17 years admitted to the ICU and already receiving antibiotics for suspected or proven sepsis (defined as systemic inflammatory response syndrome or SIRS due to infection) and children who are started on antibiotics in the ICU for suspected or proven sepsis will be included.

Exclusion criteria

  • Children receiving antibiotics more than 24 hours before presentation
  • Children with severe immunosuppression (CD4 count of less than 200 cells/mm3, neutropenic patients (<500 neutrophils/ml)) other than corticosteroid use
  • Children admitted for post-op observation
  • Children with an estimated length of stay less than 24 hrs
  • Children with underlying co-morbidities with possible imminent death
  • Children whose parents refuse to give an informed consent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

561 participants in 2 patient groups

PCT group
Experimental group
Description:
PCT group
Treatment:
Behavioral: PCT group
Standard practice group
No Intervention group
Description:
No intervention

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Rakesh Lodha; Jhuma Sankar, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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