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UnknownNCT05942157

Therapeutic Drug Monitoring in Patients With Difficult-to-Treat Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections

Evaluation of the Efficacy and Safety of Antibiotic Therapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM) in Patients With Difficult-to-Treat Gram-Negative Bacterial (DT-GNB) Infections

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
810 (estimated)
Sponsor
Singapore General Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
16 Years – 99 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

A prospective, open-label, randomized controlled trial will be conducted to evaluate a novel TDM-guided therapy in management of DT-GNB infections. We hypothesize that TDM-guided antibiotic therapy will reduce 14-day all-cause mortality by 6% (absolute risk reduction) in septic patients with DT-GNB infections, when compared to standard therapy. TDM for 11 antibiotics will be performed for all trial patients although test information will be withheld for the standard therapy arm. The primary aim is to compare the 14-day all-cause mortality rates of novel TDM-guided antibiotic dosing versus standard therapy.

Detailed description

Sepsis remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide in the face of antimicrobial resistance especially in patients with Gram-negative bacteria (GNB) infections. Limited new antibiotics for GNB infections pose a severe threat to clinical management of these patients and thus call for old antibiotics to be repurposed. Dosing regimens of old antibiotics often fail to achieve therapeutic drug concentrations in some septic patients. Septic patients commonly have significant hemodynamic changes and/or undergo extracorporeal interventions that may increase patients' susceptibility to treatment failure and increase the chance of more resistant bacteria emergence, or toxicity from the antibiotic. Hence, the "one size fits all" dosing principle for antimicrobial treatments of suspect sepsis due to infection by antibiotic-resistant- or less susceptible-GNB \[collectively known as "difficult-to-treat" (DT)-GNB infections\] is no longer viable. This will require therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) to inform if the dosing is adequate to treat such infections. This study seeks to provide evidence supporting the application of TDM-guided antibiotic therapy on reducing mortality and morbidity among septic patients with DT-GNB infections and significant hemodynamic changes, which can potentially shift current practice paradigms.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERTherapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM)Upon randomization and before the bacterial culture results are known, blood sampling will be obtained from the patient during the morning round of initial empiric antibiotic administration. PK/PD target analysis based on the clinical susceptibility breakpoints of Enterobacterales (the most prevalent organism family of DT-GNB infections in our setting) will be performed and a dosage recommendation will be communicated to the primary ID clinician. Antibiotic dosing adjustments (if any) will be made within 8 - 24 hours of the blood sampling by the Primary / Infectious Diseases clinician. In case of inappropriate dosing, where the PK/PD target is not achieved or exceeded with antibiotic side effects observed, the dosage will be increased or decreased, respectively.

Timeline

Start date
2023-03-29
Primary completion
2025-12-31
Completion
2025-12-31
First posted
2023-07-12
Last updated
2023-07-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Singapore

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05942157. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.