The SATURN ICU-trial studies the effect of antibiotic rotation on the prevalence of antibiotic resistant Gram-negative colonisation.
Antibiotic rotation has been previously studied with varied results. The theory behind antibiotic rotation is that intermittently changing antibiotic classes will reduce the ecological selective pressure that drives the emergence of antibiotic resistance. This study compares the effect of 2 types of antibiotic rotation on Gram-negative colonisation in the ICU and also compares both interventions with standard care. The two interventions apply to the empiric treatment and are: 1) "fast" rotation, i.e. every other patient another class and 2) "slow" rotation, i.e. every other 1.5month another preferred class for empiric Gram-negative antibiotic therapy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
10,000
Rotation of antibiotic classes as specific preferred antibiotic class to be used for empiric treatment of ICU acquired infections.
University Medical Center Utrecht
Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands
Mean prevalence of ICU patients colonised with antimicrobial resistant Gram-negative pathogens
Time frame: Monthly point-prevalence screening of all ICU patients
AMRB acquisition incidence, measured as status conversion from noncolonized to colonized during admission at ICU per 100 patients.
Time frame: 2011-2013
ICU-acquired bacteraemia rate with AMRB (expressed as the rate of ICU-acquired bacteraemia per 1000 patient-days)
Time frame: 2011-2013
Overall length of ICU-stay hospital-stay and percentage of in-hospital mortality of the total admitted ICU-population.
Time frame: 2011-2013
Effectiveness of empirical treatment of ICU-acquired bacteraemia, expressed as proportion of bacteraemia for which appropriate antibiotics are administered within 24 hours with antibiotics that the specific pathogens is susceptible for.
Time frame: 2011-2013
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