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biomArker-guided Duration of Antibiotic treatment in hospitalised Patients with suspecTed Sepsis (ADAPT-Sepsis): A protocol for a multicentre randomised controlled trial

Authors :
Paul Dark
Gavin D Perkins
Ronan McMullan
Danny McAuley
Anthony C Gordon
Jonathan Clayton
Dipesh Mistry
Keith Young
Scott Regan
Nicola McGowan
Matt Stevenson
Simon Gates
Gordon L Carlson
Tim Walsh
Nazir I Lone
Paul R Mouncey
Mervyn Singer
Peter Wilson
Tim Felton
Kay Marshall
Anower M. Hossain
Ranjit Lall
Source :
Dark, P, Carlson, G L, Felton, T & Marshall, K 2023, ' biomArker-guided Duration of Antibiotic treatment in hospitalised Patients with suspecTed Sepsis (ADAPT-Sepsis): A protocol for a multicentre randomised controlled trial ', Journal of the Intensive Care Society . https://doi.org/10.1177/17511437231169193
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2023.

Abstract

Aim: To describe the protocol for a multi-centre randomised controlled trial to determine whether treatment protocols monitoring daily CRP (C-reactive protein) or PCT (procalcitonin) safely allow a reduction in duration of antibiotic therapy in hospitalised adult patients with sepsis. Design: Multicentre three-arm randomised controlled trial. Setting: UK NHS hospitals. Target population: Hospitalised critically ill adults who have been commenced on intravenous antibiotics for sepsis. Health technology: Three protocols for guiding antibiotic discontinuation will be compared: (a) standard care; (b) standard care + daily CRP monitoring; (c) standard care + daily PCT monitoring. Standard care will be based on routine sepsis management and antibiotic stewardship. Measurement of outcomes and costs. Outcomes will be assessed to 28 days. The primary outcomes are total duration of antibiotics and safety outcome of all-cause mortality. Secondary outcomes include: escalation of care/re-admission; infection re-lapse/recurrence; antibiotic dose; length and level of critical care stay and length of hospital stay. Ninety-day all-cause mortality rates will also be collected. An assessment of cost effectiveness will be performed. Conclusion: In the setting of routine NHS care, if this trial finds that a treatment protocol based on monitoring CRP or PCT safely allows a reduction in duration of antibiotic therapy, and is cost effective, then this has the potential to change clinical practice for critically ill patients with sepsis. Moreover, if a biomarker-guided protocol is not found to be effective, then it will be important to avoid its use in sepsis and prevent ineffective technology becoming widely adopted in clinical practice.

Details

ISSN :
17511437
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the Intensive Care Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c533363e8bd8e00ab92c176bed921bf9