MedPath

Once Daily Metronidazole for Perforated Appendicitis

Phase 4
Withdrawn
Conditions
Appendicitis
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT02561117
Lead Sponsor
Ahmed Nasr
Brief Summary

The objective of this study is to determine whether administering once-daily doses of metronidazole, an intravenous (IV) antibiotic used to prevent infection in perforated appendicitis, is as effective in children as delivering it in the standard method of once every eight hours. Reducing the frequency of administration has the potential of decreasing personnel time and healthcare cost and increasing the lifespan of the IV line.

To determine the effectiveness once-daily administration, a randomized controlled trial (RCT) will be conducted to compare outcomes between the two treatment schedules. We will recruit 100 patients (50 per treatment) aged 5-18 being surgically treated for perforated appendicitis at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, who will be randomly assigned to one of the two treatment schedules. To compare the efficacy of the treatments, outcomes such as duration of hospital stay and theoretical cost will be measured and analyzed using statistical tests.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
WITHDRAWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
Not specified
Inclusion Criteria
  • All children 5-18 years of age, presenting to CHEO with perforated appendicitis (confirmed either in the operating room or diagnosed preoperatively according to radiological criteria), and managed surgically will be assessed for eligibility to participate. These patients may participate if baseline lab values of serum AST (SGOT), AL T (SGPT), LDH, triglycerides and hexokinase glucose are normal, complete physical exam is normal, hGC test is negative for pregnancy (if the patient is a female of reproductive age) and none of the exclusion criteria are present.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Any known co-existing gastrointestinal disease
  • Uncertainty about the diagnosis
  • Perforated appendicitis with diffuse abdominal fluid on imaging associated with a clinical picture of severe sepsis
  • A known allergy to any of the antibiotics to be used in this trial
  • An active neurological disorder
  • Receiving medical treatment for a neurological disorder
  • A history of blood dyscrasia, hypothyroidism or hypoadrenalism
  • Hepatic disease
  • Renal impairment
  • Patients receiving any other oral or intravenous concomitant antimicrobial at enrollment
  • Pregnancy
  • Under five years of age
  • Patients who have received metronidazole orally or intravenously in the last 14 days, prior to the current admission for appendicitis
  • Patients already taking any of the following medications at admission (as these may interact with Metronidazole as stated in the product monograph): disulfiram, oral anticoagulant therapy (warfarin type), phenytoin or phenobarbital, vecuronium, lithium, busulfan
  • The physician elects to treat the patient conservatively (non-surgically)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
q8hMetronidazoleMetronidazole given every 8 hours
q24hMetronidazoleMetronidazole given once daily
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Length of stayuntil discharge (usually less than one week after admission)

• Duration of hospital stay (in days) during initial admission for perforated appendicitis (Patient will be discharged when eating normal diet, afebrile for 24 hours and no abdominal pain)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Quantity of narcoticsFrom date of randomization to date of death from any cause or three months after initial discharge from hospital, whichever comes first.

mg/kg per day of narcotics

Duration of antibiotics oralFrom date of randomization to date of death from any cause or three months after initial discharge from hospital, whichever comes first.

duration of oral antibiotic therapy following discharge (days)

Duration of narcoticsFrom date of randomization to date of death from any cause or three months after initial discharge from hospital, whichever comes first.

total number of days of narcotics

Duration of antibiotics IVFrom date of randomization to date of death from any cause or three months after initial discharge from hospital, whichever comes first.

duration of IV antibiotic therapy (days)

Theoretical cost in CADFrom date of randomization to date of death from any cause or three months after initial discharge from hospital, whichever comes first.

In our study, due to blinding, much of the potential cost-savings of once-daily administration of metronidazole - including nursing time, pharmacy time, and IV materials - will not be evident. However, we will calculate the potential cost-savings of once-daily administration. This will be based on number of hours of nursing time saved (the research coordinator (RC) will, on 10 occasions, observe a nurse administering a dose of metronidazole to a patient not enrolled in this study, and will average these to estimate the time required to administer one dose), number of hours of pharmacy time saved (the RC will, on 10 occasions, observe a pharmacist preparing a dose of metronidazole for a patient not enrolled in this study, and will average these to estimate the time required to prepare one dose), and cost saved on materials (the minibag used to deliver the antibiotic, the IV needle and line if it needed to be replaced, etc.)

Failure of antibioticsduring hospital stay (usually less than one week)

o No clinical improvement after five days, as decided by the patient's surgeon. This will result in the patient being switched to a regimen of different antibiotics.

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