Project Name: Randomized Controlled Clinical Study on oral hygiene and prophylactic antibiotics to prevent Intracerebral Hemorrhage associated pneumonia Research Objectives: To evaluate the effectiveness, safety and health economics value of enhanced oral hygiene combined with antibiotics in preventing post-cerebral hemorrhage pneumonia. 1. To clarify the effectiveness of enhanced oral hygiene combined with antibiotics in preventing post-cerebral hemorrhage pneumonia. 2. To clarify the safety of enhanced oral hygiene combined with antibiotics in preventing post-cerebral hemorrhage pneumonia. 3. To clarify the health economics value of low-intensity enhanced oral hygiene combined with antibiotics in preventing post-cerebral hemorrhage pneumonia. Research Design: Research Type: Multicenter, Randomized, Controlled, Open Label, Blinded Endpoint Research Design Research Hypothesis: Intensive oral hygiene combined with antibiotic treatment is beneficial in reducing the incidence of pulmonary infections related to cerebral hemorrhage.
Research Background: The era of evidence-based medicine has been entered. For acute ischemic stroke within the 4.5-hour time window, intravenous thrombolysis, mechanical thrombectomy within 24 hours of onset, and stroke units all have clear evidence-based medical support for their intervention methods. However, for cerebral hemorrhage, which has higher disability and mortality rates, treatment methods currently lack evidence-based medical support, with management more often being supportive. In this context, exploring new targets, methods, and strategies to improve the prognosis of cerebrovascular diseases has become a hot topic in global research. Stroke-associated pneumonia (SAP) is one of the most common complications after stroke. Substantial evidence shows that the occurrence of SAP not only increases patient length of hospital stay and medical expenses but also significantly elevates the risk of death and severe disability post-stroke. Based on data from the China National Stroke Registry (CNSR), the composition and distribution of various complications after cerebral infarction and cerebral hemorrhage in Chinese patients were first systematically reported. Among them, SAP is the most common complication for both major stroke subtypes: cerebral infarction and cerebral hemorrhage. Concurrently, it was also found that SAP not only increases the risk of adverse stroke prognosis but is also an important risk factor for the increase of various non-pneumonia complications. For example, in the sub-cohort of acute cerebral infarction patients (N=14,702), the occurrence of SAP increased the risk of gastrointestinal bleeding by 8-fold (adjusted OR=8.35; 95% CI=6.27-11.1; P\<0.001), pressure ulcers by 5-fold (OR=5.31; 95% CI=3.39-8.31; P\<0.001), deep vein thrombosis by 4-fold (OR=4.27; 95% CI=2.41-7.59; P\<0.001), symptomatic epilepsy by 4-fold (OR=3.96; 95% CI=2.67-5.88; P\<0.001), urinary tract infection by 3-fold (OR=3.34; 95% CI=2.73-4.10; P\<0.001), atrial fibrillation by 3-fold (OR=3.17; 95% CI=2.58-3.90; P\<0.001), and stroke recurrence by 2-fold (OR=2.65; 95% CI=2.07-3.40; P\<0.001). The same phenomenon was also confirmed in the cerebral hemorrhage cohort (N=5,221). The effective prevention and control of SAP will become a new target for improving stroke prognosis, as clearly reflected in multiple domestic and international expert consensuses and guidelines on SAP. Similar related studies have been conducted abroad. In 2015, the UK STROKE-INF study, for patients hospitalized within 48 hours after stroke onset, administered prophylactic antibiotics for 7 days plus standard stroke ward care or standard stroke ward care alone, finally including 1,217 patients from 37 units (615 in the antibiotic group, 602 in the control group). No difference was found in the diagnosis of post-stroke pneumonia between the two groups (101 of 615 patients \[16%\] in the antibiotic treatment group vs. 91 of 602 patients \[15%\] in the non-antibiotic treatment group; adjusted OR = 1.01 \[95% CI 0.61-1.68\], p = 0.957). In 2015, the Dutch PASS study randomly assigned acute stroke patients in a 1:1 ratio to an antibiotic treatment group (ceftriaxone) or a non-antibiotic treatment group (control) within 24 hours after onset. The control group received standardized stroke treatment; the ceftriaxone group received standardized treatment plus intravenous application of 2g ceftriaxone once daily for 4 days. Finally, 2,538 patients were included for treatment analysis (ceftriaxone group: 1,268; control group: 1,270). The study results showed that prophylactic use of ceftriaxone was safe, mainly manifested by a significantly lower incidence of urinary tract infections in the ceftriaxone group, with no significant difference in the incidence of infections at other sites between the two groups. Prophylactic ceftriaxone did not affect the distribution of 3-month modified Rankin Scale (mRS) scores (OR = 0.95 \[95% CI 0.81-1.09\], p = 0.46). Both these trials yielded negative results. This study aims to explore the relationship between the preventive use of antibiotics combined with oral care and the incidence of SAP in the Chinese population. Research Objectives: To clarify the effectiveness of enhanced oral hygiene combined with antibiotics in preventing pneumonia after cerebral hemorrhage. To clarify the safety of enhanced oral hygiene combined with antibiotics in preventing pneumonia after cerebral hemorrhage. To clarify the health economics value of enhanced oral hygiene combined with antibiotics in preventing pneumonia after cerebral hemorrhage.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
440
Intervention group: After randomization, immediate intensive oral hygiene treatment (chlorhexidine 20 ml, three times a day) combined with antibiotics (ceftazidime 1 g, every 8 hours) was administered on the basis of the conventional standard treatment, and the treatment lasted for 3 days; Control group: Conventional standard treatment combined with routine oral care (normal saline 20 ml, twice a day), and detailed records were made of the specific measures of patient oral care, including the selection of cleaning solution and frequency.
Beijing Tiantan Hospital
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
RECRUITINGThe occurrence of pneumonia related to cerebral hemorrhage
The occurrence of pneumonia related to cerebral hemorrhage
Time frame: From enrollment to the 10th day after randomization or at the time of discharge
urinary tract infection or other systemic infection
urinary tract infection or other systemic infection
Time frame: From enrollment to the 10th day after randomization or at discharge
Improvement in neurological dysfunction (NIHSS10d-NIHSS group)
This study used the difference between the NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS, 0-42) score on the 10th day after randomization or at discharge and the NIHSS score (0-42) at the time of enrollment to represent the change in neurological dysfunction (NIHSS10d-NIHSS group). The smaller the difference, or even a negative value, the better the improvement in neurological dysfunction. Conversely, the larger the difference, the worse the improvement.
Time frame: From enrollment to the 10th day after randomization or at discharge
Length of hospital stay
The period from the patient's admission to the patient's discharge.It is the date of discharge minus the date of admission
Time frame: From hospital admission until discharge (anticipated average 7-10 days)
direct medical expenses during hospitalization
The direct expenses incurred by the patient during the hospitalization period.
Time frame: From hospital admission until discharge (anticipated average 7-10 days)
Modified Rankin Scale score
This study used the Modified Rankin Scale (mRS,0-6) score at 90 ± 7 days after randomization to reflect the long-term prognosis of the patients. The higher the score, the worse the prognosis. Conversely, the lower the score, the better the prognosis.
Time frame: From enrollment to the 90 days ± 7 days after randomization
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