Effectiveness of a biomarker-based exclusion of ventilator-acquired pneumonia to reduce antibiotic use: protocol for a randomised controlled trial (VAPrapid-2):Study protocol for a randomised controlled trial


Autoria(s): Hellyer, Thomas P.; Anderson, Niall H.; Parker, Jennie; Dark, Paul; van den Broeck, Tina; Singh, Suveer; McMullan, Ronan; Agus, Ashley; Emerson, Lydia M.; Blackwood, Bronagh; Gossain, Savita; Walsh, Tim; Perkins, Gavin; Conway Morris, Andre; McAuley, Daniel F.; Simpson, A. John
Data(s)

16/07/2016

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/effectiveness-of-a-biomarkerbased-exclusion-of-ventilatoracquired-pneumonia-to-reduce-antibiotic-use-protocol-for-a-randomised-controlled-trial-vaprapid2(494f6710-a00d-4549-811c-549a675f2c9d).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13063-016-1442-x

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/ws/files/68053490/effectiveness.pdf

http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84978288383&partnerID=8YFLogxK

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Hellyer , T P , Anderson , N H , Parker , J , Dark , P , van den Broeck , T , Singh , S , McMullan , R , Agus , A , Emerson , L M , Blackwood , B , Gossain , S , Walsh , T , Perkins , G , Conway Morris , A , McAuley , D F & Simpson , A J 2016 , ' Effectiveness of a biomarker-based exclusion of ventilator-acquired pneumonia to reduce antibiotic use: protocol for a randomised controlled trial (VAPrapid-2) : Study protocol for a randomised controlled trial ' Trials , vol 17 , 318 . DOI: 10.1186/s13063-016-1442-x , 10.1186/s13063-016-1442-x

Tipo

article

Resumo

Background Ventilator-acquired pneumonia (VAP) is a common reason for antimicrobial therapy in the intensive care unit (ICU). Biomarker-based diagnostics could improve antimicrobial stewardship through rapid exclusion of VAP. Bronchoalveloar lavage (BAL) fluid biomarkers have previously been shown to allow the exclusion of VAP with high confidence. Methods/Design This is a prospective, multi-centre, randomised, controlled trial to determine whether a rapid biomarker-based exclusion of VAP results in fewer antibiotics and improved antimicrobial management. Patients with clinically suspected VAP undergo BAL, and VAP is confirmed by growth of a potential pathogen at > 104 colony-forming units per millilitre (CFU/ml). Patients are randomised 1:1, to either a ‘biomarker-guided recommendation on antibiotics’ in which BAL fluid is tested for IL-1β and IL-8 in addition to routine microbiology testing, or to ‘routine use of antibiotics’ in which BAL undergoes routine microbiology testing only. Clinical teams are blinded to intervention until 6 hours after randomisation, when biomarker results are reported to the clinician. The primary outcome is a change in the frequency distribution of antibiotic-free days (AFD) in the 7 days following BAL. Secondary outcome measures include antibiotic use at 14 and 28 days; ventilator-free days; 28-day mortality and ICU mortality; sequential organ failure assessment (SOFA) at days 3, 7 and 14; duration of stay in critical care and the hospital; antibiotic-associated infections; and antibiotic-resistant pathogen cultures up to hospital discharge, death or 56 days. A healthcare-resource-utilisation analysis will be calculated from the duration of critical care and hospital stay. In addition, safety data will be collected with respect to performing BAL. A sample size of 210 will be required to detect a clinically significant shift in the distribution of AFD towards more patients having fewer antibiotics and therefore more AFD. Discussion This trial will test whether a rapid biomarker-based exclusion of VAP results in rapid discontinuation of antibiotics and therefore improves antibiotic management in patients with suspected VAP.

Formato

application/pdf