In this study the investigators aim to test if a procalcitonin (PCT) - guided strategy allows to reduce the antibiotic use in patients with febrile neutropenia hospitalized in a Brazilian tertiary university hospital, causing no harm.
Methods * Patients and setting: Prospective controlled randomized interventional study of antibiotic therapy in adult with febrile neutropenia. The study will be conducted in the University Hospital of the Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil. This is a 600-bed tertiary hospital, with approximately 1.6 thousands hospitalizations/month. Roughly 120 episodes of febrile neutropenia were recorded in the first semester of 2007, occurring in 100 patients with hematological leucosis or post-BMT. This number rises if one considers other groups of neutropenic patients, such as those with neutropenia due chemotherapy for solid tumors, patients with BM aplasia, myelo dysplasia, among others, * Interventions: As long as the core objective of the study is to test if a PCT-guided protocol allows to guide the antibiotic withdrawn in neutropenic patients, only patients with febrile neutropenia under antibiotic therapy will be included in the study. They will be submitted to the following exams: * Bood samples will be drawn at baseline to blood culture, CRP, blood cells count, ions, liver profile and renal function tests. These exams will be repeated according to the local protocol followed by the Service of Hematology (see appendix). * A plasma galactomannan test will be performed at baseline in all patients considered for inclusion in the study, and repeated at any moment if there is suspicion of Aspergillus infection during the follow up. * A chest radiography will also be performed in all participants at baseline, and according to clinical indication afterwards. * All patients with abnormal chest radiography at baseline will be submitted to a contrasted chest CT (or without contrast if creatinine clearance \< 50 ml/min). * Additional complementary exams will be performed as clinically needed. * Circulating PCT measurements will be performed at baseline, and then on day 3 (if initial PCT \< 0.5) or on day 5 (if initial PCT \>0.5). Eligible patients will be reassessed for on day 3 (if initial PCT \< 0.5) or on day 5 (if initial PCT \>0.5), and randomized at 1:1 basis to one of the two groups since any exclusion criteria (see below) is present at that time: Group 1 - PCT group: the interventions on antibiotic therapy will be based on circulating PCT levels. Group 2 - Control group: antibiotic therapy will be guided by appropriate guidelines, and will be left at the discretion of caregivers. Patients randomized to the study will undergo daily measurements of plasma PCT levels, and kept under antibiotic therapy until a relative reduction of 90% in baseline PCT levels, or a value lower than 0.5 ng/ml is reached, and then maintained for additional 48h (two measure). Therefore, plasma PCT levels will be measured every 5 days up to the 28th day of follow-up or until death or transference, if either occurs first. Patients included in the interventional group will be observed for at least 48 hours following antibiotic discontinuation before being discharged from the hospital. Extra PCT tests will be performed according to the clinical course. Apart from the antibiotic therapy, all participants will be managed according to the appropriate guidelines. Patients with febrile neutropenia hospitalized in the University Hospital of the Federal University of Minas Gerais are routinely cared by an experienced hematology specialist together with an infectious diseases consultant. This standard care will be offered to all patients included in the study. The final decision regarding antibiotic therapy will be always let to the discretion of these specialists.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
60
plasma PCT measurement
antibiotic therapy use
Hospital das Clínicas da Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil
Antibiotic exposure, measured by: - incidence density of ''antibiotic exposure days'' - incidence rate ratio (IRR) of antibiotic exposure
Time frame: 28 days
Number of days alive without antibiotics
Time frame: 28 days
Duration of antibiotic therapy for the first episode of fever
Time frame: 28 days
Length of hospital stay
Time frame: 6 m
All cause and infection-related 28-day mortality
Time frame: 28 days
All cause 90-day mortality
Time frame: 90 days
Clinical cure rate
Time frame: 28 days
Nosocomial superinfection (diagnosed more than 48 hours after discontinuation of the antibiotic(s) given to the first episode of infection)
Time frame: 28 days
Infection relapse (diagnosed less than 48 h after antibiotic discontinuation)
Time frame: 48 hours
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