The purpose of this study is to determine whether choosing antibiotics based on a biofilm antimicrobial susceptibility assay rather than a conventional planktonic antimicrobial susceptibility assay to treat CF patients with chronic P. aeruginosa infection with an acute pulmonary exacerbation is a safe intervention that will result in improved microbiological and clinical outcomes and decrease markers of pulmonary inflammation.
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most common fatal genetic condition in the Caucasian population and affects over 3,000 Canadians. Respiratory failure caused by chronic pulmonary infection is the primary cause of death in CF patients. The improved life expectancy of CF patients in the past several decades is due in part to the more aggressive use of antibiotics in the treatment of respiratory infections. However, there is currently no antimicrobial susceptibility assay that can predict which antibiotics will result in improved patient outcomes. Since Pseudomonas aeruginosa is known to grow as a resistant biofilm in the CF lung, antimicrobial susceptibility testing based on biofilm growth of P. aeruginosa may lead to different antibiotic choices that significantly decrease the pulmonary bacterial density of P. aeruginosa. A biofilm antimicrobial susceptibility assay thus has the ability to change the way antibiotics are chosen to treat CF patients and result in improved lung function and longer lives for all CF patients.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
134
Subjects in this arm will be prescribed 14 days of an intravenous 2 drug antibiotic combination based on conventional planktonic antimicrobial susceptibility testing results.
Subjects in this arm will be prescribed 14 days of an intravenous 2 drug antibiotic combination based on biofilm antimicrobial susceptibility testing results.
BC Children's Hospital
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
St. Paul's Hospital
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Hamilton Health Sciences
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
St. Michael's Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
The proportion of patients in the intervention arm versus the control arm who have ≥ 3 log drop in colony forming units (CFUs) of P. aeruginosa in sputum.
Time frame: Measured at day 0 and day 14 of antibiotic treatment and at the 1 month follow-up visit
The change in pulmonary function tests, including forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), forced vital capacity (FVC), and maximal midexpiratory flow rate (FEF25-75) in the intervention arm versus the control arm
Time frame: Measured at day 0, day 7, and day 14 of antibiotic treatment and at the 1 month follow-up visit
The time to subsequent acute pulmonary exacerbation in the intervention arm versus the control arm
Time frame: 1 year following the completion of antibiotic therapy
The change in the cumulative score on a quality of life questionnaire in the intervention arm versus the control arm
Time frame: Measued at day 0 and day 14 of antibiotic treatment and at the 1 month follow-up visit
The change in the measurement of markers of pulmonary inflammation (neutrophil counts, neutrophil elastase and IL-8 levels in sputum) in the intervention arm versus the control arm.
Time frame: Meaured at day 0 and day 14 of antibiotic treatment and at the 1 month follow-up visit
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The Hospital for Sick Children
Toronto, Ontario, Canada