A Randomized Study of a Short Duration Therapy for Candidemia
- Conditions
- CANDIDEMIA
- Interventions
- Drug: Standard of Care (SOC)Drug: Shortened duration of antifungal therapy
- Registration Number
- NCT06859671
- Lead Sponsor
- Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
- Brief Summary
Scientific justification Candidemia is a major public health problem. In France, the 30-day mortality of candidemia varies from 30% to 50% depending on the need for intensive care and it has not decreased in 30 years.
The duration of treatment for candidemia was set at a minimum of 14 days after the last positive blood culture following the Rex trial (1) comparing the efficacy of fluconazole vs amphotericin B where the minimum duration of treatment was imposed. The risk of a too short treatment is the absence of control of the candidemia with secondary dissemination, in particular cardiac and ophthalmic.
A retrospective study looking at the risk of ophthalmologic complications after candidemia found among the 21/78 treated for less than 14 days, only one case of late endophthalmitis in a patient who had only been treated for 48 hours. In addition, the prolonged duration of antifungals exposes the risk of selection of more resistant strains with a modification of the flora, with the possibility of acquiring resistance as early as 8 days of treatment with caspofungin, and has a greater liver toxicity.
There is no prospective study on the direct impact of antifungal agents (type of antifungal agent and duration) on the mycobiota.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- NOT_YET_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 362
- Adults (Age ≥ 18 years old)
- With an uncomplicated candidemia defined by the absence of secondary sites requiring prolonged treatment: endocarditis, ophthalmologic involvement, thrombosed catheter, arthritis, meningitis, candida abscess that cannot be drained, pyelonephritis.
- Without expected aplasia duration greater than 7 days
- Being apyretic and having a 1st negative blood culture after diagnosis
- Removal of the vascular catheter if present
- Written informed consent from the patients or his/her relatives
- Patients with less than 7 days of aplasia predictable
- Presence of an indwelling vascular catheter or device that cannot be removed or an abscess that cannot be drained and is likely to be the source of candidemia or the presence of secondary sites of candidemia requiring prolonged treatment
- Patients with more than 7 days of aplasia
- Candida strain resistant to the antifungal used
- Pregnancy, breastfeeding
- Hypersensitivity or previous severe adverse drug reaction to the antifungal treatments.
- unwilling, in the judgment of the investigator, to comply with the protocol
- Patient under legal guardianship or without healthcare coverage
- Women with childbearing potential not using adequate contraception
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description 14 days of antifungal treatment Standard of Care (SOC) - 7 days of antifungal treatment Shortened duration of antifungal therapy -
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method All-cause mortality (ACM) At day 28 at day 28 after the 1st negative blood culture under antifungal treatment for all patients included with an uncomplicated candidemia
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Proportion of patients with secondary localizations At day 28 Cumulative incidence of death related to fungal infection At day 28 at Day 28 after the 1st negative blood culture under antifungal treatment
Aspartate Amino-transferase level At day 28 alanine aminotransférase (ALAT) level At day 28 Gamma-Glutamyl Transférase (GGT) level At day 28 Bilirubin blood levels At day 28 Cost per extra-day alive without antifungal treatment Up to day 28 Incremental cost effectiveness ratio
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