Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
The overall objective of this study is to assess the clinical value of the SeptiFast Test as an adjunct to traditional microbiological, clinical, and other laboratory assessments in early detection and identification of a potential pathogen and therefore early targeted antimicrobial management of neutropenic hematological patients with suspected infection or sepsis.
Full description
Infections, including sepsis, continue to be a major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with hematologic diseases. Early diagnosis of infection, rapid identification of the causative pathogen(s), and prompt initiation of appropriate antimicrobial treatment (the first 24 hours are most critical) all have a major impact on mortality.
The LightCycler® SeptiFast Test MGRADE (SeptiFast Test) is an in vitro nucleic acid amplification test for the direct detection and identification of DNA from bacterial and fungal microorganisms in human EDTA whole blood. The SeptiFast test can detect nucleic acids from the most common pathogens (approximately 90%) responsible for hospital-associated bacteremia. The test is used in conjunction with the patient's clinical presentation and established microbiological assays and other laboratory markers as an aid in antimicrobial treatment decision making for patients with suspected sepsis and other bloodstream infections.
This is a randomized prospective study of the use of the SeptiFast Test as an adjunct to traditional management of neutropenic haematological patients suspected of having infection or sepsis. The study will be performed in a two-armed manner. The blood sample for the SeptiFast Test will be collected from all included patients. However, analysis of the SeptiFast Test in the control group will only be performed at a later point in time; thus, in the control group results will not become available until the end of the study and, therefore, cannot be used for guiding clinical decisions.
Patients complete the study when the episode of infection or sepsis resolves, or the patient is discharged from a hospital, or the patient died.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Patient with hematological disease and neutropenia < 500/µl (or < 1000/µl, if criterion 5A is fulfilled)
Known or acute infection, or suspected infection, or sepsis, which clinically indicates investigation by blood culture
Time-frame after diagnosis or suspicion of infection or sepsis: < 72 hours
Species causing infection not known before inclusion
Patient fulfils criterion A or/and B
A. Indication for an initiation of antimicrobial therapy in patients with febrile neutropenia
B. At least two of the following criteria:
Patient is able to provide written informed consent
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
150 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal