Use of MULTIplex PCR, Procalcitonin, and Sputum Appearance to Reduce Duration of Antibiotic Therapy During Severe COPD EXAcerbation: A Controlled, Randomized, Open-label, Parallel-Group, Multicenter Trial
NCT05280132
Summary
COPD is a common chronic disease. Its natural course is characterized by Acute exacerbations (AE). This may require hospitalization or even ICU/RESUSCITATION admission. The most common causes are respiratory distress with hypercapnic acidosis that requires mechanical ventilation (Invasive or non-invasive). Lower respiratory tract infections, bacteria and/or viruses are the main pathogenic factors of AE. The treatment of AECOPD is initially symptomatic treatment, combining bronchodilators, ventilatory support (oxygen therapy and/or mechanical ventilation) and respiratory physiotherapy. Systemic corticosteroid therapy is optional. When i) the sputum is purulent and ii) increased dyspnea and / or an increase in sputum volume is observed, antibiotic treatment is recommended for hospitalized patients. Antibiotic therapy is routinely recommended when mechanical ventilation is required. During ICU/RESUSCITATION AECOPD, more than 85% of patients received antibiotic therapy, with a median duration of 8 to 9 days, and the benefit of antibiotic therapy is likely to be limited to infected patients. Suspected or documented lower respiratory tract bacteria, that is, 25% to 50% of patients. This will lead to overuse of antibiotics, which is a problem for patients and the community. A personalized antibiotic strategy could limit this phenomenon, relying on multimodal methods, using aspect of sputum (clinical method), procalcitonin (PCT) (biological method) and the FilmArray ™ Pneumonia Panel extended panel multiplex respiratory PCR Plus (mPCR FA-PPP) (Biomérieux®) (microbiological approach). The hypothesis of this study is that sputum appearance, procalcitonin (PCT) and the FilmArray ™ Pneumonia Panel Plus expanded panel multiplex respiratory PCR (mPCR FA-PPP) (Biomérieux®) could be used in combination , and their results integrated into a decision-making algorithm aimed at personalizing antibiotic therapy and guiding its early termination in patients admitted to ICU/RESUSCITATION due to acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD) to the main benefit of antibiotic savings, and without additional risk to patient safety.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria: * Age ≥ 18 years old * COPD (according to GOLD 2020), whatever the stage (I-IV) * Acute exacerbation (defined as the onset or worsening of one or more of the usual signs/symptoms of COPD) with acute worsening of respiratory symptoms that result in additional therapy) with acute respiratory failure requiring admission to ICU and ventilatory support (invasive mechanical ventilation or non-invasive mechanical ventilation or high-flow nasal oxygen therapy with FiO2 ≥ 50%) * Informed consent of patient, patient's immediate family/ or inclusion in an emergency situation * Affiliation to a social security Exclusion Criteria: * The interval between admission to the hospital and admission to ICU more than 3 days * Antibiotic therapy clearly needed for a suspected or documented extra-respiratory infection * Congenital or acquired immunosuppression (congenital immune deficiency, high-grade hematologic malignancies, use of immunosuppressive drugs in the last 30 days including anti-cancer chemotherapy and antirejection medications, corticosteroid treatment ≥ 20 mg/d prednisone equivalent for at least 14 days, neutropenia, HIV with unknown or known CD4 \<200 / µL in the past 6 months) * Tracheotomy * Bronchiectasis / cystic fibrosis * Moribund patient (imminent death) * Patient deprived of liberty and / or under legal protection measure * Patient already included in MULTI-EXA * Patient already included in a type 1 interventional study on antibiotics * Ongoing pregnancy
Conditions2
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NCT05280132