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CAMERA2 – combination antibiotic therapy for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infection: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
- Source :
- Trials
- Publisher :
- Springer Nature
-
Abstract
- Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bacteraemia is a serious infection resulting in 20–50 % 90-day mortality. The limitations of vancomycin, the current standard therapy for MRSA, make treatment difficult. The only other approved drug for treatment of MRSA bacteraemia, daptomycin, has not been shown to be superior to vancomycin. Surprisingly, there has been consistent in-vitro and in-vivo laboratory data demonstrating synergy between vancomycin or daptomycin and an anti-staphylococcal β-lactam antibiotic. There is also growing clinical data to support such combinations, including a recent pilot randomised controlled trial (RCT) that demonstrated a trend towards a reduction in the duration of bacteraemia in patients treated with vancomycin plus flucloxacillin compared to vancomycin alone. Our aim is to determine whether the addition of an anti-staphylococcal penicillin to standard therapy results in improved clinical outcomes in MRSA bacteraemia. We will perform an open-label, parallel-group, randomised (1:1) controlled trial at 29 sites in Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and Israel. Adults (aged 18 years or older) with MRSA grown from at least one blood culture and able to be randomised within 72 hours of the index blood culture collection will be eligible for inclusion. Participants will be randomised to vancomycin or daptomycin (standard therapy) given intravenously or to standard therapy plus 7 days of an anti-staphylococcal β-lactam (flucloxacillin, cloxacillin, or cefazolin). The primary endpoint will be a composite outcome at 90 days of (1) all-cause mortality, (2) persistent bacteraemia at day 5 or beyond, (3) microbiological relapse, or (4) microbiological treatment failure. The recruitment target of 440 patients is based on an expected failure rate for the primary outcome of 30 % in the control arm and the ability to detect a clinically meaningful absolute decrease of 12.5 %, with a two-sided alpha of 0.05, a power of 80 %, and assuming 10 % of patients will not be evaluable for the primary endpoint. Key potential advantages of adding anti-staphylococcal β-lactams to standard therapy for MRSA bacteraemia include their safety profile, low cost, and wide availability. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02365493 . Registered 24 February 2015.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Time Factors
Cefazolin
Medicine (miscellaneous)
MRSA
medicine.disease_cause
law.invention
Flucloxacillin
Study Protocol
Randomized controlled trial
Clinical Protocols
law
Clinical endpoint
Blood culture
Pharmacology (medical)
Israel
Randomised controlled trial
Singapore
medicine.diagnostic_test
Staphylococcal Infections
Methicillin-resistant
3. Good health
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Treatment Outcome
Research Design
Combination
Vancomycin
Drug Therapy, Combination
Cloxacillin
medicine.drug
Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
medicine.medical_specialty
Staphylococcus aureus
030106 microbiology
beta-Lactams
Floxacillin
Nafcillin
03 medical and health sciences
Daptomycin
Internal medicine
medicine
Humans
Intensive care medicine
business.industry
Australia
biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition
bacterial infections and mycoses
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
Methicillin Resistance
business
New Zealand
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 17456215
- Volume :
- 17
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Trials
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ea153b1fdf6218ba8d9aa6561bcb7a70
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-016-1295-3