Status and phase
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About
The purpose of this study is to determine the optimal outpatient treatment strategy of uncomplicated skin and soft tissue infection (SSTI) in areas of the United States where the prevalence of Community-Acquired Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus (S.) aureus (CA-MRSA) is high. Infection with the S. aureus bacteria that is resistant to antibiotics is a cause of SSTIs. Three oral antibiotics will be tested for off patent treatment. Patients will receive Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX), placebo (substance containing no medication), clindamycin, or cephalexin or some combination of these. The study population will include 2,235 volunteers, children 13 years of age and over and adults presenting to 5 large urban Emergency Departments. Therapy for acute uncomplicated SSTIs, including abscess, infected wound, and cellulitis will start on the day of enrollment. Participants may be involved in study related procedures for about 9 weeks.
Full description
Community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) has recently emerged as a cause of skin and soft-tissue infection (SSTI). In the current era of increasing CA-MRSA infections, the outpatient management of SSTIs has not been well studied. This will be a clinical trial to evaluate oral off-patent antibiotics for outpatient treatment of patients with any of the 3 main types of acute uncomplicated SSTI, i.e., abscesses, infected wounds, and cellulitis. Upon enrollment, subjects will be stratified by type of infection, and then randomized to various treatments. Subjects with an acute uncomplicated cutaneous abscess receiving incision and drainage (I&D) will be treated with Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) or placebo to determine whether the addition of an antibiotic with activity against CA-MRSA is more clinically efficacious than I&D alone. Subjects with an acute wound infection will be treated with TMP/SMX or clindamycin to determine if clindamycin, an antibiotic with activity against CA-MRSA, methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA), and streptococci is more clinically efficacious than TMP/SMX, an antibiotic with activity against CA-MRSA and MSSA. Subjects with acute cellulitis will be treated with cephalexin/TMP/SMX or cephalexin/placebo to determine if cephalexin/TMP/SMX is more clinically efficacious than cephalexin alone. The primary objectives for each type of SSTI studied are to compare the cure rates in the per protocol (PP) population. Secondary objectives provide additional means of assessment for the clinical efficacy of the employed interventions and resolution of the infection and include describing microbiological cure, change in the dimension of erythema, composite cure, surgical procedures, invasive and recurrent infections, infections in household contacts, and time to normal activity and until analgesics are no longer used at various times in the PP/ modified intent-to-treat (mITT) populations. This is a multi-center, randomized, double-blind clinical trial in which subjects will be stratified by the type of infection and then randomized to various 7-day oral antibiotic treatments, including placebo-controlled and comparative designs. The study population will include children 13 years of age and over and adults, who weigh greater than or equal to 40 kg presenting to 5 large urban emergency departments. Therapy will start on the day of enrollment. Subjects will be evaluated upon enrollment, at 2-3 days after enrollment (OTV), at 1-3 days after the end-of-therapy (EOT), at 7-14 days after the end-of-therapy (TOC), and at 6-8 weeks after the end-of-therapy (EFV).
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Adult or child 13 years of age and older (who weighs greater than or equal to 40 kg);
Have a skin and soft tissue infection (SSTI) with all three local findings of erythema (> 2 cm across the lesion or from a discrete wound edge), tenderness, and swelling/induration. Fever, leukocytosis, and lymphangitis will be noted, but are not enrollment criteria. SSTI with these local findings will be further categorized and defined as one of:
Abscess - a fluctuant and/or indurated lesion, or findings of a fluid-filled cavity on soft tissue ultrasound evaluation that, when opened reveals purulent material, receiving incision and drainage (I&D) (considered standard care for abscess) and having a minimum diameter (along any axis) of at least 2 cm (measured from the borders of induration, if a fluctuant lesion, or borders of the abscess cavity on ultrasound, if not fluctuant).
Note: Although I&D of an abscess is considered standard care (i.e., patients will receive I&D whether or not they are enrolled in the study), the procedure may be performed after enrollment into the study so that prior measurements of the area of erythema and swelling/induration can be obtained unless it is an occult abscess in which the I&D will be performed prior to enrollment to verify infection type and ensure correct classification of the subject.
Infected Wound - a wound (defined as any apparent break in the skin) with any apparent drainage limited in depth to only involving skin and subcutaneous tissue, including sutured cutaneous wounds not involving intra-abdominal surgeries contaminated with bacterial or bowel contents (e.g., colon surgery and empyema drainage), and
Cellulitis - an area of erythema without the presence of a wound with drainage or abscess; Cellulitis associated with an abscess will be categorized as an abscess. Cellulitis associated with an infected wound will be classified as an infected wound. Patients with cellulitis and an abscess less than 2 cm will be excluded. Infected wound associated with an abscess that may require I&D, will be classified as an infected wound.
Have the infected lesion for 7 days or less duration;
Are to receive outpatient treatment at enrollment/baseline;
Express willingness and ability to be contacted and return for re-evaluation according to the study protocol;
Provide written informed consent (and for subjects ages 13-17, consent from their guardian and assent);
Negative pregnancy test for subjects who are women of childbearing potential.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
2,265 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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