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Study on Reduced Antibiotic Treatment vs Broad Spectrum Betalactam in Patients With Bacteremia by Enterobacteriaceae (SIMPLIFY)

F

Fundación Pública Andaluza para la gestión de la Investigación en Sevilla

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3

Conditions

Enterobacteriaceae Infections

Treatments

Drug: Antipseudomonal beta-lactam antibiotic
Drug: De-escalation(short-spectrum antibiotic)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02795949
SIMPLFY

Details and patient eligibility

About

The continuous increase in the bacterial resistance rate and the slow arrival of new therapeutic options have turned into an antibiotic crisis. One of the strategies proposed by stewardship programs to try to change this situation described worldwide is the use of antibiotics with the lowest possible antimicrobial spectrum.

Enterobacteriaceae bacteremia is a good example of how this strategy would be applied. The empirical treatment of nosocomial bacteremia by Enterobacteriaceae comprises in several cases one or two antibiotics with antipseudomonal activity, being much less common than desirable a subsequent change to narrower spectrum antibiotics based on susceptibility data ("de escalation"). This is because the safety of de escalation is based only on expert advice and some observational studies, so their efficacy and safety is questioned by many clinicians and therefore its use is lower than desired. In fact, a recent systematic review of the Cochrane Library concluded that randomized studies to support this practice are needed. Investigators propose a "real clinical practice-based" randomized trial to compare the efficacy and safety of continuing with an antipseudomonal agents vs. de-escalation according to a pre-specified rule, in patients with bacteraemia due to Enterobacteriaceae.

Enrollment

344 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 90 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. ≥18 years old hospitalized patients with bacteremia from any source with isolation of an enterobacteria in blood cultures.
  2. Active empiric treatment with antipseudomonal betalactamic at 48 hours from the symptoms of sepsis and the blood culture.The patient could have received any other type of antibiotic therapy up to 24 hours after blood extraction.
  3. Microorganism susceptible at least one treatment from the experimental arm.
  4. Patients with intravenous treatment at least 3 days from the randomization o 5 days from the initial blood culture.
  5. Patients to sign the informed consent form.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Palliative care or life expectance < 90 days.
  2. Pregnancy or lactation period.
  3. To isolate the Extended-spectrum β-lactamases producing Enterobacteriaceae
  4. Late randomization >48 hours after the enterobacteriaceae blood culture´s identification
  5. Severe neutropenic (< 500 céls/mm3) at the randomization.
  6. Treatment of infection > 28 days (endocarditis and osteomyelitis) or meningitis.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

344 participants in 2 patient groups

Antipseudomonal beta-lactam antibiotic
Experimental group
Description:
1. Ampicillin 2g IV/6h 2. Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole 160/800 mg IV/8 -12h 3. Cefuroxime 750-1000 mg IV/8h 4. Cefotaxime 1-2g IV/8h ó ceftriaxone 1 g/12-24h 5. Amoxicillin/clavulanate 1000/125 mg IV/8h 6. Ciprofloxacin 400 mg IV/12h 7. Ertapenem 1-2g/24h.
Treatment:
Drug: Antipseudomonal beta-lactam antibiotic
De-escalation(short-spectrum antibiotic)
Active Comparator group
Description:
* Piperacillin/tazobactam 4/0.5 g IV/8h * Meropenem 1-2 g IV/8h * Imipenem 0.5 g IV/6h - 1g IV/6h * Aztreonam 1-2 g IV/8h * Ceftazidime 1-2 g IV/8h * Cefepime 2 g IV/8-12h
Treatment:
Drug: De-escalation(short-spectrum antibiotic)

Trial contacts and locations

21

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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