Febrile urinary tract infections and urosepsis are common and potentially serious infections that require effective antimicrobial treatment. The duration of parenteral treatment depends on oral alternatives. These alternatives are few and due to antimicrobial resistance, quinolones are "standard of care". The increased use of quinolones is concerning because of its negative ecological aspects and it is confirmed an increasing incidence of resistant E.coli to quinolones in Norwegian isolates. Pivmecillinam is an antibiotic with high susceptibility to E.coli but the evidence for treating febrile urinary tract infections is insufficient. This trial will investigate the efficacy and safety of pivmecillinam in treating pyelonephritis and urosepsis caused by E.coli. The hypothesis is that urosepsis can safely be treated with pivmecillinam when it is given after 2-3 days with empirical i.v. antibiotics.
This trial will be conducted at Vestfold Hospital, Norway, and is a prospective observational study with intention to treat. Participants will be consecutively included among hospitalized patients suffering from urosepsis - see eligibility criteria. After 3 days with parenteral antibiotics, when clinical improvement and absence of fever/leukocytosis is confirmed, the participants will start on pivmecillinam 400mg four times daily and be discharged. Pivmecillinam is to be taken for one week. The participants will be contacted by phone on day 4, 10 and 33 (days after admission). On day 17 (test of cure, TOC) they will meet for physical examination. They will report symptom score (standardized schema) on day 0, and 17. Urine samples will be collected on day 10 and 17. Blood samples on day 17. All data will be stored anonymously. The trial will be monitored by extern resources.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
53
Oral treatment of bacteremic pyelonephritis following standard initial parenteral treatment
Vestfold Hospital Trust
Tønsberg, Vestfold, Norway
Clinical efficacy
Defined as abscence of fever, no need for other antibiotics than prescribed and improvement of symptoms (self-reported improvement and EQ 5D VAS-scale).
Time frame: Day 17
C-reactive protein-level (CRP)
Compare CRP-level on day 0 with day 17.
Time frame: Day 17
Readmission due to urinary tract infection (UTI)
Check if participants are readmitted due to UTI.
Time frame: Day 33
Readmission - any cause
Check if participants have been readmitted to hospital
Time frame: Day 33
Adverse effects
Registrate frequency of rash/skin problems, abdominal pain, clostridium difficile associated diarrhea
Time frame: Day 33
Microbial efficacy
Defined as \<1.000 CFU E.coli in urine
Time frame: Day 17
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