Short-term Antibiotic Treatment for Unexplained Fever in Solid Cancer Patients With Febrile Neutropenia
- Conditions
- Febrile Neutropenia
- Interventions
- Other: Early antibiotic discontinuationOther: Usual practice
- Registration Number
- NCT01450241
- Lead Sponsor
- Rabin Medical Center
- Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to determine whether short-course antibiotic therapy is safe and effective for the treatment of cancer patients with febrile neutropenia.
- Detailed Description
Febrile neutropenia remains a major cause of morbidity in solid cancer patients. There is an unresolved question regarding the appropriate duration of antibiotic treatment for patients with febrile neutropenia of unknown origin. Current guidelines recommend at least seven days of antibiotic treatment. Several studies have demonstrated the safety of early antibiotic discontinuation in patients with febrile neutropenia. We plan an open label randomized controlled trial to compare early antibiotic discontinuation to the accepted prolonged antibiotic treatment protocol
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- WITHDRAWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- Not specified
- Adults >18 years providing signed informed consent
- Patients with solid tumors, lymphoma, multiple myeloma or chronic lymphocytic leukemia, regardless of disease status or previous chemotherapy
- Documented febrile neutropenia
- No clinically or microbiologically documented infection after 72 hours
- Previous enrollment in this study
- Concurrent participation in another interventional trial
- Severe sepsis or septic shock
- Acute leukemia, autologous or allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation
- Diarrhea suspected by treating physician to be Irinotecan induced
- Any antibiotic treatment for >48h in the last week before enrollment
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Early antibiotic discontinuation Early antibiotic discontinuation Antibiotic treatment stopped after 72h, regardless of fever.The antibiotics used will be piperacillin tazobactam for high-risk patients and amoxycillin-clavulanate + ciprlofloxacin for low-risk patients (defined by MASCC scoring system). Alternatives in case of penicillin allergy will be ceftazidine and levofloxacin, respectively. Usual practice Usual practice Antibiotic treatment continued according to accepted guidelines and current clinical practice. The antibiotics used will be piperacillin tazobactam for high-risk patients and amoxycillin-clavulanate + ciprlofloxacin for low-risk patients (defined by MASCC scoring system). Alternatives in case of penicillin allergy will be ceftazidine and levofloxacin, respectively.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Composite outcome of all-cause mortality, severe infection, severe diarrhea or fever After day 7 from randomization until day 30 Composite outcome of all-cause mortality, severe infection (defined as clinically or microbiologically documented infection with systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS)), severe diarrhea (\>=3 daily for \>=2 days) or fever (\>38)
Total febrile or antibiotic days From the day of randomization until day 30 Total febrile or antibiotic days from the day of randomization until day 30, defined as a day with one or more temperature measurement \>38.0°C or a day on which antibiotic treatment was prescribed for any reason other than prophylaxis
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Clinically and/or microbiologically documented infections 30 days Clinically and/or microbiologically documented infections within 30 days of randomization. We will use the 2008 CDC/NHSN surveillance definitions of health-care associated infections for bacterial infections (including Clostridium difficile) and the 2008 revised definitions for invasive fungal infections.
Total in-hospital days 30 days Total in-hospital days from the day of randomization up to day 30
Re-admission 30 days Rates of re-admission for any reason other than planned chemotherapy.
Antibiotic treatment After day 7 from randomization until day 30 Patients receiving antibiotic treatment after day 7 from randomization until day 30
Antifungal treatment 30 days Institution of antifungal treatment
Duration of intravenous antibiotic treatment 30 days Duration of intravenous antibiotic treatment
Duration of neutropenia 30 days Duration of neutropenia
Development of resistance 30 days Development of resistance, defined as clinical isolates resistant to antibiotics previously used in the febrile episode. Surveillance sampling will not be conducted.
All-cause mortality 30 days All-cause mortality
Infection-related mortality 30 days after randomization Cause of death adjudicated by the trial's safety committee
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Rabin Medical Center, Beilinson Hospital
🇮🇱Petah Tikvah, Israel