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RecruitingNCT07372131

Antibiotic Duration and Outcomes in High-Risk Febrile Neutropenia Patients

Appropriate Management of Bacteriemic Febrile Neutropenia in High-Risk Hematological Patients. Relationship Between Duration of Antibiotic Administration, Outcome and Resistance Profile

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
172 (estimated)
Sponsor
Humanitas University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if a personalized duration of antibiotic therapy, based on clinical stability, is as effective as a standard duration of at least 10 days in hospitalized patients with hematologic malignancies (such as leukemia or lymphoma) who develop febrile neutropenia and Gram-negative bacteraemia. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Can a personalized antibiotic duration increase the number of days free from anti-Gram-negative therapy within 28 days without compromising patient safety? * How does the duration of antibiotic therapy (short vs. prolonged) affect the rate and modality of gut microbiota reconstitution? Researchers will compare: * Group A (Personalized Duration): Antibiotics are stopped after the patient maintains clinical stability (no fever and stable vital signs) for 72 consecutive hours. * Group B (Standard of Care): Antibiotics are continued for a standard duration, typically at least 10 days, based on current clinical surveys and physician decision. Participants will: * Be randomized to receive either the personalized or the standard duration of antibiotic therapy once a Gram-negative infection is confirmed in the blood. * Be monitored for 28 days to assess for new fever episodes, recurrence of infection, and overall survival. * If participating in the microbiological sub-study, provide biological samples (blood, feces, and rectal swabs) at specific time points (at the onset of fever, at the end of treatment, and at day 28). * Undergo specialized laboratory testing (Whole Metagenomic Sequencing) on the collected samples to evaluate the evolution of their intestinal and blood microbiota and the presence of antibiotic-resistant genes.

Detailed description

This is a multicenter, open-label, randomized controlled trial. Upon confirmation of Gram-negative bacteraemia, eligible patients are randomized 1:1 to one of two treatment strategies: * Experimental Arm (Personalized Duration): Antibiotic therapy is discontinued once the patient achieves and maintains clinical stability for 72 consecutive hours. Clinical stability is defined as apyrexia (Tc \< 38°C) for at least 48 hours and a stable or improving qSOFA score. * Control Arm (Standard of Care): Antibiotic therapy duration follows local clinical practice, with a suggested minimum duration of 10 days, consistent with current European and Asian hematological guidelines. In parallel, a prospective observational microbiological sub-study will utilize Shotgun Metagenomic Next-Generation Sequencing (mNGS) to analyze the evolution of the intestinal and blood microbiota. The goal is to compare the rate of MDR organism colonization and the reconstitution of the healthy microbiome between the two antibiotic duration strategies. All participants will undergo clinical monitoring until day 28. For those enrolled in the sub-study, biological samples (stool, rectal swabs, and blood) will be collected at baseline (V1), at the end of treatment (V4), and at the end of the study (V5). These samples will be analyzed to identify clinically significant bacteria and antibiotic-resistance genes.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERClinical Stability-Driven Antibiotic Discontinuation StrategyA therapeutic strategy where the duration of antibiotic treatment for Gram-negative bacteraemia is determined by the achievement of clinical stability (defined as apyrexia for 48h and stable/improved qSOFA score) maintained for 72 consecutive hours
OTHERStandard of Care Antibiotic DurationThis intervention follows the standard clinical practice for treating Gram-negative bacteraemia in hematological patients. The duration of therapy is not fixed by a stability-driven rule but is based on the treating physician's decision, with a suggested minimum of 10 days.

Timeline

Start date
2025-05-10
Primary completion
2026-02-28
Completion
2026-11-30
First posted
2026-01-28
Last updated
2026-01-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07372131. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.