Comparison of Two Antibiotic Regimens for the Treatment of Early Airways Infection With Pseudomonas Aeruginosa in Adults With Bronchiectasis: a Non-inferiority Randomized Controlled Trial.
Overview
- Phase
- Phase 2
- Intervention
- Antibiotic monotherapy treatment and follow-up
- Conditions
- Bronchiectasis
- Sponsor
- Centre Hospitalier Intercommunal Creteil
- Enrollment
- 196
- Locations
- 18
- Primary Endpoint
- PA-eradication rate
- Status
- Recruiting
- Last Updated
- 9 months ago
Overview
Brief Summary
Chronic airways infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) is associated with increased frequency of exacerbations, deterioration in quality of life and increased mortality in adult patients with bronchiectasis. Current guidelines suggest the prescription of an eradication antibiotic treatment for a first episode of PA infection (early PA infection). Several antibiotic regimens may be proposed, ranging from a monotherapy with oral fluoroquinolone (FQ) to an intravenous cotherapy with the addition of inhaled antibiotics that seems to improve the rate of PA eradication. As no study strictly favoured one regimen, current practices are heterogeneous and could certainly benefit from stronger evidence, with both medical and economic impact.
Detailed Description
According to current knowledge, the early combination of an oral FQ to an inhaled antibiotic could be an acceptable alternative to a systemic cotherapy. Indeed, such regimen allows avoiding IV drugs use, facilitating ambulatory management and influencing patient's quality of life and costs, and may achieve similar PA-eradication rate.
Investigators
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •≥18 years of age
- •Diagnosis of bronchiectasis on thoracic CT-scan
- •Recent isolation of P. aeruginosa (PA) in a respiratory sample (spontaneous or induced sputum or other lower respiratory tract sample obtained by bronchoscopy) within the last 3 months, with a PA positive respiratory sample obtained ≤ 3 weeks before randomization
- •Patient either Pseudomonas naive (i.e., never previously isolated PA) or Pseudomonas free (i.e., infection-free for ≥1 year, proven by at least two PA negative respiratory sample during the last year)
- •Patient affiliated with the French health care system
- •Able to understand and sign a written informed consent form
Exclusion Criteria
- •Confirmed diagnosis of cystic fibrosis
- •Pregnancy or breastfeeding
- •Women of childbearing potential (after the first menstrual period and until menopause or permanent sterility (hysterectomy, bilateral salpingectomy and bilateral oophorectomy)) who refuse to use effective contraception (hormonal or mechanical) for 3 months and/or to undergo pregnancy tests at baseline, 1 month and 3 months after baseline.
- •Isolation of PA in a respiratory specimen (spontaneous or induced sputum or other lower respiratory tract specimen obtained by bronchoscopy) more than 3 months to 12 months prior to randomization.
- •PA resistant to ciprofloxacin or ceftazidime
- •Severe exacerbation requiring admission to an intensive care unit (e.g. for non-invasive ventilatory support, invasive mechanical ventilation, catecholamine or any other organ supportive therapy)
- •Prior severe reaction, hypersensitivity reaction or other contraindication to any of the treatments in study (ciprofloxacin, beta-lactam, colistimethate sodium)
- •Prior severe bronchospasm attributed to a nebulization
- •Patients already receiving PA suppressive therapy with an inhaled antibiotic (long-term azithromycin therapy accepted)
- •Prior PA-eradication antibiotic treatment (systemic antibiotic(s) active against PA for ≥ 14 days or nebulized anti-PA antibiotic) within the last year
Arms & Interventions
Oral fluoroquinolone + nebulized colistimethate sodium
Intervention: Antibiotic monotherapy treatment and follow-up
IV beta-lactam antibiotic (ceftazidime) + oral fluoroquinolone + nebulized colistimethate sodium
Intervention: Antibiotic bitherapy treatment and follow-up
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
PA-eradication rate
Time Frame: 6 months
PA-eradication rate 6 months after the start of antibiotic therapy targeting PA, where PA eradication is defined as follows: * Sputum culture (or lower airway specimen culture, if respiratory exacerbation\* with inability to perform good quality sputum analysis) negative for PA at the 6-month follow-up visit, or * Inability to spit in the absence of a pulmonary exacerbation\*, AND * No sputum culture or lower airway specimen positive for PA between D90 of antibiotic treatment and the 6-month follow-up visit, in the absence of new antibiotic therapy targeting PA.
Secondary Outcomes
- 1 year-exacerbation rate(3, 6 and 12 months-follow up visit)
- Time to first PA-recurrence(3, 6 and 12 months-follow up visit)
- Time to first exacerbation(3, 6 and 12 months-follow up visit, or additional visit)
- Quality-of-life using questionnaires(Inclusion, 3 and 12 months-follow up visit)
- Treatment burden assessment using questionnaires(Inclusion, 3 and 12 months-follow up visit)
- Number of premature ending of one of the treatment in study due to any AE(1 months and 3 months-follow up visit)
- Number of premature ending of one of the treatment in study(1 months and 3 months-follow up visit)
- Cost and incremental cost effectiveness ratio at 1 year(Inclusion and each follow up visit up to one year for quality of life measures; initial discharge and subsequent exacerbation-related readmissions up to one year.)
- Detection of PA at 3-month and 1 year(3 and 12 months-follow up visit)
- Emergence of FQ-resistant strains of (PA or other bacteria)(3, 6 and 12 months-follow up visit)
- Adverse event (AE) and serious AE at 12 months follow-up(during the 12 months follow-up)
- Proportion of non-administered doses of nebulized colistin(1 months and 3 months-follow up visit)