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Randomised multicentre effectiveness trial of rapid syndromic testing by panel assay in children presenting to European emergency departments with acute respiratory infections—trial protocol for the ADEQUATE Paediatric trial

Authors :
Alexander Ross
Andrew Atkinson
Maarten J Postma
Federica Vanoni
Julia A Bielicki
Fernando Antoñanzas
Herman Goossens
Elias Iosifidis
Emmanuel Roilides
Mark Lyttle
Elia Vitale
Malte Kohns Vasconcelos
Florence Allantaz
Claire Hawksworth
Pablo Rojo
Dalia Dawoud
Surbhi Malhotra-Kumar
Silke Peter
Hanna Renk
Marc Bonten
Manuel Gijon
Maggie Nyirenda Nyang’wa
Thea van Asselt
Anthony Hemeson
Cristina Prat Aymerich
Simon van der Pol
Parthena Savvidou
Sophie Vandepitte
Emma Gardiner
Michelle Clements
Yasmine Yau
Giulio Vecchia
Federica D’Ambrosio
Wietske Bouwman
Marjolein van Esschoten
Frank Leus
David de Pooter
Leen Timbermont
Juan Pablo Rodriguez Ruiz
Benjamin Hommel
Marie Tessonneau
Jean-Louis Tissier
Philippe Cleuziat
Pim van Dorst
Paula Rojas
Marino Gonzales
Harry Heijerman
Henri van Werkhoven
Maria Simitsopoulou
Kalliopi Pantzartzi
Kostas Zarras
Argyro Ftergioti
Maria Kitsou
Aristea Karypiadou
Charis Lampada
Konstantina Charisi
Olga Tsiatsiou
Elsa Chorafa
Elisavet Michailidou
Ann-Kathrin Stiegler
Carmen Junk
Kristina Kiesel
Maren Belschner
Maike Seyfried
Kristina Schmauder
Tobias Walter
Dominic Imort
Fabian Behret
Rahel Berger
Leon Pfeiffer
Emanuela Früh
Elena Robinson
Andrea Marten
Claudia Werner
Rosa Calderón
Fátima Machín
Laura Cabello
Andrea Seoane
Sofía Mesa
Lidia Oviedo
Luisa Barón
Irene Hernández
Lisa Capozzi
Louisa Brock
Cecilia Hultin
Louise F Hill
Alessia Severi Conti
Gianluca Gualco
Source :
BMJ Open, Vol 14, Iss 4 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2024.

Abstract

Introduction Syndromic panel assays, that is, using one test to simultaneously target multiple pathogens with overlapping signs and symptoms, have been integrated into routine paediatric care over the past decade, mainly for more severely ill and hospitalised patients. Their wider availability and short turnaround times open the possibility to apply them to non-hospitalised patients as well. In this context, it is important to trial how clinicians make use of pathogen detection data and if their early availability influences management decisions, particularly antibiotic use and hospitalisation.Methods and analysis Advanced Diagnostics for Enhanced QUality of Antibiotic prescription in respiratory Tract infections in Emergency rooms is an individually randomised, controlled, open-label effectiveness trial comparing the impact of a respiratory pathogen panel assay (BIOFIRE Respiratory Panel 2.1plus) used as a rapid syndromic test on nasopharyngeal swabs in addition to the standard of care versus standard of care alone. The trial will 1:1 randomise 520 participants under the age of 18 at 7 paediatric emergency departments in 5 European countries. Inclusion criteria for the trial consist of two sets, with the first describing respiratory tract infections in paediatric patients and the second describing the situation of potential management uncertainty in which test results may immediately affect management decisions. Enrolment started in July 2021 and is expected to be completed in early 2024. We will perform a two-sample t-test assuming a pooled variance estimate to compare the log-transformed mean time on antibiotic treatment (in hours) and number of days alive out of the hospital within 14 days after study enrolment between the control and intervention arms.Ethics and dissemination The trial protocol and materials were approved by research ethics committees in all participating countries. The respiratory pathogen panel assay is CE marked (assessed to meet European regulations) and FDA (United States Food and Drug Administration) cleared for diagnostic use. Participants and caregivers provide informed consent prior to study procedures commencing. The trial results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and at national and international conferences. Key messages will also be disseminated via press and social media where appropriate.Trial registration number NCT04781530.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
14
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5c0be897b4147ba974e10f2eee0d1ef
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-076338