SIS Multicenter Study of Duration of Antibiotics for Intraabdominal Infection
Overview
- Phase
- Phase 3
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Peritonitis
- Sponsor
- University of Virginia
- Enrollment
- 518
- Locations
- 23
- Primary Endpoint
- The primary endpoint will be percentage failure conditioned by assigned duration of antibiotic therapy (intent to treat analysis).
- Status
- Completed
- Last Updated
- 7 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
The major hypothesis to be tested is that the treatment of intraabdominal infections that have been adequately treated operatively or by percutaneous techniques with three to five days of antibiotics will result in outcomes equivalent to the current standard where treatment is carried out until the patient has returned to normal (normal white blood cell count, temperature, and intestinal function), and that patients treated for three to five days will receive fewer days of antibiotics than the control group that has traditionally received seven to 14 days of treatment.
Detailed Description
Overall, this is a prospective, randomized, single-blinded (analysis), fifteen-center study using intent to treat analysis. Patients will be identified and after informed consent is obtained, will be randomized to receive antibiotics for 3 to 5 days (4 ± 1 days) after the initial surgical or percutaneous intervention or antibiotics until two calendar days after the patient's white blood cell count, systemic temperature, and gastrointestinal function have normalized (maximum of 10 days). The primary endpoint is the composite rate of in-hospital death and/or recurrence of intraabdominal infection and/or occurrence of surgical site (wound) infection. Secondary endpoints include the occurrence of any infection at any site and infection with antibiotic-resistant pathogens. Patient data through the thirty days following the initial intervention or until hospital discharge (whichever is longer) will be tracked
Investigators
Robert Sawyer, MD
PI
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •age ≥ 16 at some sites,(≥ 18 at UVA)
- •ability to obtain informed consent from the subject or surrogate
- •Presence of an intraabdominal infection requiring any duration of hospitalization and managed with open, laparoscopic, or percutaneous intervention.
- •A peripheral white blood cell count of \> 11,000/mm and/or temperature ≥ 38.0 C with in 24 hours or gastrointestinal dysfunction sufficient to prevent intake of normal diet within 24hrs of initial operative or percutaneous intervention.
- •Adequate source control in the opinion of the local investigator and PI. Source control is defined as any procedure that stops the ongoing contamination of the peritoneal cavity and removes the majority of the contaminated intraperitoneal contents to the extent that no further acute interventions are felt to be necessary.
Exclusion Criteria
- •age \< 16 years at some sites(\< 18 at UVA)
- •Inability to obtain consent from the patient, parents, or surrogate
- •Lack of adequate source control in the opinion of the local investigator or overall PI ( Robert Sawyer)
- •High likelihood of death within 72 hours of initial intervention in the opinion of the local investigator or principal investigator
- •Lack of any clinical improvement within 72 hours of initial intervention in the opinion of the local investigator or principal investigator.
- •Planned relaparotomy
- •Perforated gastric ulcer or duodenal ulcer treated within 24hours of the onset of symptoms
- •Traumatic injury to the bowel (including iatrogenic or intra-operative) treated within 12 hours of injury
- •Non-perforated, non-gangrenous appendicitis or cholecystitis
- •Gangrenous appendicitis or peritonitis without confirmatory cultures or with cultures without bacterial or fungal growth
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
The primary endpoint will be percentage failure conditioned by assigned duration of antibiotic therapy (intent to treat analysis).
Time Frame: 30 days
Secondary Outcomes
- rate of death within 30 days(30 days)
- rate of intraabdominal or surgical site failure due to antimicrobial-resistant pathogens(30 days)
- duration of hospitalization(30 days)
- Failure rate for clinically evaluable patients receiving the appropriate duration of antibiotics(30 days)
- failure rate for microbiologically evaluable patients(30 days)
- rate of need for reintervention in the abdomen(30 days)
- rate of surgical site infection(30 days)
- rate of any subsequent infection at a site other than the abdomen or the surgical site(30 days)
- rate of infection at a non-abdominal, non-surgical site with a resistant organism(30 days)
- rate of Clostridium difficile infection(30 days)