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Urinary tract infections (UTI) are commonly encountered in children, with 7% diagnosed with at least one UTI by the age of 19 years. The evidence for treatment of uncomplicated UTI is clear; oral antibiotics are as good as intravenous (IV) antibiotics, usually for a total of 7 days. Complicated UTIs (cUTIs) on the other hand, are common reasons for hospital admissions for IV antibiotics and constitute a major burden for healthcare systems. There is considerable variation in care for children who present with UTI and have complicating features such as vomiting, dehydration, urological abnormalities or have a previous history of UTI. Australian and international guidelines lack clear, evidence-based recommendations to guide treatment in this group. Without gold standard evidence, these children will continue to receive unnecessary IV antibiotics, longer hospital stays and poorer health outcomes.
This multicentre, non-inferiority randomised trial will investigate if One dose - single dose of IV followed by 2 days oral antibiotics is as non-inferior to Three doses for children with UTI and co-existing complicating factors presenting to the Emergency Department (ED). In other words, this study will compare if a single dose of IV antibiotics plus two days oral antibiotics is as clinically effective as 3 doses antibiotics in resolving UTI symptoms at 72 hours after the first dose of IV antibiotics, for complicated UTIs in children presenting to the ED. All participants will receive a total of 7 days of antibiotics for the complicated urinary tract infection. If 1 dose IV and 2 days oral antibiotics is found to be as good as 3 days, the duration of IV antibiotics for complicated UTI can be reduced along with avoidance of the inherent risks of unnecessary hospital admission by administering a single IV dose in an outpatient/ED setting. On the other hand if a single IV dose results in prolonged symptoms or treatment failure, this will inform practice for the proportion of children who have a single dose of IV antibiotics in the ED and are sent home on oral antibiotics. Regardless of the outcome, this trial will inform clinical practice for complicated UTI to improve health outcomes for this group.
Full description
Study design:
An open label, multi-centre, pragmatic, non-inferiority randomised controlled trial (RCT).
It will incorporate a two-arm, non-inferiority design with parallel groups and 1:1 allocation of children with ≥2 complicated features of UTI presenting to the ED in whom clinicians deem parenteral antibiotics are required.
Primary objective:
The primary objective of this trial is to compare whether 1 dose of a daily parenteral antibiotic followed by 2 days oral antibiotics is as clinically effective (non-inferior) in resolving UTI symptoms at 72 hours after the first IV dose, as 3 doses of a daily parenteral antibiotic for complicated urinary tract infections presenting to the ED.
Definition:
1 dose: one dose of a daily dose IV to cover Gram negative bacteria +/- one dose IV to cover Enterococcus spp. This will be followed by two days oral antibiotics.
3 doses: three doses of a daily dose IV to cover Gram negative bacteria +/- 3 days IV antibiotics to cover Enterococcus spp.
Secondary objectives:
The secondary objectives of this trial are to compare the following outcomes between the 1 dose and the 3 doses arms:
Intervention:
Patients who are eligible for the study will be randomised to receive 1 dose of daily IV antibiotics followed by 2 days of oral antibiotics or 3 doses of daily IV antibiotics . All participants will receive a total of 7 days treatment with antibiotics for the complicated urinary tract infection.
Oral antibiotics will start as soon as able to tolerate, within 12 hours of the last IV dose for both arms.
Study methodology:
Enrolment and randomisation: During ED assessment, clinicians will identify patients with a suspected UTI and screen patients against eligibility criteria. The relevant clinical team at each site will receive standardized, study specific education based on centrally developed study education materials. Presence of the following symptoms/sign will be recorded at baseline (fever, vomiting, rigors, tachycardia). Participants will be randomised to one of the 2 arms after written informed consent is obtained.
Intervention Day 1:
The first dose of the antibiotics will be commenced in the ED. Care of the patient will be as per routine clinical care. Decision for admission to hospital and location of treatment (ambulatory/Hospital-in-the-Home care) will be determined by the treating clinician as per routine clinical care. Parents will be provided with a thermometer and a diary to record a daily assessment of their child (fever, rigors, vomiting).
Intervention Day 4 :
72 hours after the first dose of IV antibiotics, a research nurse/assistant will conduct an assessment over phone or telehealth to obtain the primary outcome data: Persistence of baseline symptoms (fever, vomiting, rigors) or development of these symptoms (if not previously present) since baseline. Any ambiguity with regards to symptoms being attributable to UTI will be judged by a blinded clinician external to the research team.
Follow up Day 14:
14 days after the first dose of IV antibiotics, a research nurse/assistant will conduct an assessment over phone or telehealth for follow up data including whether GP/ED visit or readmission occurred for UTI and total duration of antibiotics taken by the patient.
Follow up 1 month:
1 month after the first dose of IV antibiotics, a research nurse/assistant will conduct an assessment over phone or telehealth for follow up data including whether GP/ED visit or readmission occurred for UTI, total duration of antibiotics taken by the patient.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
3 months (corrected age) to 18 years
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
452 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Marijana Vanevski; Laila Ibrahim
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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