Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT01455246

Daptomycin + Meropenem Versus Ceftazidime in the Treatment of Nosocomial Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis

Daptomycin + Meropenem Versus Ceftazidime in the Treatment of Nosocomial Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis: an Open, Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial

Status
Terminated
Phase
Phase 2 / Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
32 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Padova · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Nosocomial spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is frequently caused by multi drug resistant bacteria. Standard treatment of SBP could be ineffective. The aim of the study is to compare daptomycin + meropenem vs ceftazidime in the treatment of nosocomial SBP.

Detailed description

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is a well known complication in patients with liver cirrhosis and ascites. Nosocomial SBP is defined as SBP that occurs after 48 hours of hospitalization. It has been shown that patients with nosocomial SBP have a worse prognosis than patients with community-acquired SBP. It has also been shown that nosocomial SBP is frequently caused by multi drug resistant bacteria such as extended-spectrum-beta-lactamase (ESBL) producing enterobacteria or meticillin - resistant staphylococcus aureus. Currently the empirical treatment of SBP is the use of third generation cephalosporins or amoxicillin/clavulanic acid. In patients affected by nosocomial SBP these treatment could be ineffective. Up to now an empirical approach with a broader spectrum strategy (such as an association between meropenem and daptomycin) has never been compared to standard therapy in the treatment of nosocomial SBP. Thus, the aim of the study is to compare daptomycin + meropenem vs ceftazidime in the treatment of nosocomial SBP in patients with cirrhosis.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGDaptomycin + MeropenemDaptomycin will be administered at the dose of 6 mg/kg every 24 hours and 6 mg/kg every 48 hours for an estimated creatinine clearance (CKD-EPI) of \> 30 ml/min and \< 30 ml/min respectively. Meropenem will be administered at the dose of 1 g t.i.d., 1 g b.i.d., 0.5 g every 24 hours for an estimated creatinine clearance of \>50 ml/min, 10-50 ml/min, and \< 10 ml/min respectively. The treatment will go on for 7 days. In the patients without response to treatment after 48 hours will be added a rescue therapy with fluconazole. In patients in which cultures shown a bacterial species resistant to therapy, daptomycin and meropenem will be discontinued and replaced by a therapy based on antibiotic susceptibility of isolated species.
DRUGCeftazidimeCeftazidime will be administered at the dose of 2 g t.i.d, 2 g b.i.d and 2 g at every 24 hours by intravenous infusion for an estimated creatinine clearance (CKD-EPI) of \>50 ml/min, 10-50 ml/min, and \< 10 ml/min respectively. The treatment will go on for 7 days. In the patients without response to treatment after 48 hours, or in which cultures shown a bacterial species resistant to therapy, ceftazidime will be discontinued and replaced by a rescue therapy with meropenem and daptomycin as provided for the experimental arm

Timeline

Start date
2010-10-01
Primary completion
2014-04-01
Completion
2014-07-01
First posted
2011-10-19
Last updated
2014-10-15

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01455246. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.