Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00233376

Computerized Decision Support System for Antibiotic Treatment

Improving Empirical Antibiotic Treatment Using TREAT,a Computerized Decision Support System. Cluster Randomized Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,500 (planned)
Sponsor
Rabin Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
16 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

We developed a computerized decision support system for prescription of antibiotics to inpatients. The purpose of the study is to assess the performance of the system in different wards, in three different hospitals, in three countries.

Detailed description

Antibiotic treatment for suspected moderate to severe bacterial infections is usually initiated empirically, prior to identification of the causative pathogen. Appropriate treatment, that is matching in-vitro susceptibilities of subsequently isolated pathogens, reduces the overall fatality rate of severe infections with adjusted odds ratios varying between 1.6 and 6.9. In the same studies, 20-50% of patients were given inappropriate empirical antibiotic treatment. We developed a computerized decision support system (TREAT) based on a causal probabilistic network to improve antibiotic treatment of inpatients. The aims of the system were to improve the rate of appropriate antibiotic treatment, thereby reducing mortality, and to route antibiotic use towards ecologically economical antibiotics as determined by local resistance profiles. The system can be calibrated to different locations. The TREAT system was tested in a multi-center observational cohort study. The study proved the system safe and effective. TREAT prescribed appropriate antibiotic treatment to 70% of patients, 58% of whom were treated appropriately by physicians. TREAT used a narrow antibiotic formulary and at lower costs, mainly lowering costs assigned by the model to future resistance. The system performed well in three different countries (Israel, Italy and Germany). We then proceeded to assess the effect of TREAT on the management of inpatients in these sites in a cluster randomized controlled trial. We used wards as the unit of randomization to avoid contamination through education of users by the system, and to benefit from the interaction of TREAT with the ward as a whole. Comparison: the TREAT system was installed in intervention wards and its use was offered to physicians at the time of empirical antibiotic treatment. Physicians were asked to inspect TREAT's result interface. The final choice of antibiotic treatment was theirs. Control wards had no access to the system. We assessed outcomes in intervention vs. control wards with regard to patient outcomes, appropriateness of antibiotic treatment and antibiotic costs.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREAccess to an antibiotic decision support system
BEHAVIORALDistribution of local antibiotic guidelines

Timeline

Start date
2004-05-01
Completion
2004-11-01
First posted
2005-10-05
Last updated
2006-07-18

Locations

3 sites across 3 countries: Germany, Israel, Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00233376. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.