Vancomycin vs. Vancomycin Plus Gentamycin in Treatment of MRSA Infection
NCT ID: NCT00304811
Last Updated: 2009-09-28
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE4
160 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2006-01-31
2007-01-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Bacteremic MRSA infections are highly problematic for at least two reasons: (1)they are serious, with substantial morbidity and about a 25% rate of mortality in middle-aged adults, the principal patients in our system; and (2)available antibiotic therapy is suboptimal.
In the pre-MRSA era (before 1982 in the United States), treatment of bacteremic S. aureus infection with a beta-lactam antibiotic such as nafcillin produced a uniform microbiological cure (Musher DM, McKenzie SO: Infections due to Staphylococcus aureus. Medicine 56:383-409, 1977). This means that, in the absence of an untreated focus of infection that required surgical removal (such as a myocardial abscess), antibiotics rapidly sterilized the blood stream. This does not mean that no one died; deaths from complications of infection remained common. But, at autopsy, there was generally no evidence for active infection. Extensive literature examined the question of whether gentamicin should be added to nafcillin to treat this kind of disease (reviewed critically in DM, Verner EF: Treatment of Infections due to Staphylococcus aureus. IN The Staphylococci, Ed. by J Jeljascewicz, Gustave Fischer Verlag, Stuttgart, New York, pp.407-419, 1986). Gentamicin produced a synergistic bactericidal effect agains S. aureus in vitro and in animal models. In humans, the addition of gentamicin was associated with more rapid sterilization of the blood stream, but prolonged gentamicin therapy was also associated with nephrotoxicity.
In contrast, in the MRSA era, treatment with vancomycin is associated with persistence of bacteremia (positive blood cultures) and death from active infection. We have recently participated in a prospective observational study that documented the association between vancomycin treatment, persistently positive blood cultures, and persistence of active infection during treatment of S. aureus bacteremia with vancomycin (Chang F-Y, McDonald BB, Peacock, Jr. JE, Musher DM, et al. Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia: recurrence and the impact of antibiotic treatment in a prospective multicenter study. Medicine 82:333-339, 2003).
There appears to be a very close correlation between the outcome of treatment for serious S. aureus infection and the bactericidal activity of the treating antibiotic in vitro using conventional techniques (Musher DM, Verner EF: Treatment of infections due to Staphylococcus aureus. IN The Staphylococci, Ed. by J Jeljascewicz, Gustave Fischer Verlag, Stuttgart, New York, pp.407-419, 1986). We recently showed that adding low concentrations of gentamicin to vancomycin led to substantial synergistic bactericidal activity against MRSA (Shelburne SA, Musher DM, Hulten K, Ceasar H, Lu MY, Bhaila I, Hamill RJ. In-vitro killing of community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus with drug combinations. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 48:4016-9, 2004).
Based in part on the analogy of nafcillin for treating methicillin-susceptible S. aureus infection, and in part of in vitro studies such as ours (cited above), some physicians regularly add gentamicin to vancomycin for treating MRSA infection. Others, without even the in vitro support, add rifampin either instead of gentamicin or together with gentamicin. There are no clinical studies to support or to refute any of these clinically motivated usages.
Thus, at present, about one-third of patients with MRSA bacteremia at VAMC are treated with vacomycin plus gentamicin, and two-thirds receive vancomycin alone; some in each group receive rifampin. The decisionto add gentamicin is made a haphazard fashion. Our proposal is, once MRSA has been identified in acceptable regimens by stratifying patients prospectively to vancomycin alone or vancomycin plus gentamicin, and further stratifying each of those groups to be with or without rifampin.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SINGLE
Interventions
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Vancomycin
Vancomycin plus Gentamicin
Vancomycin plus Rifampin
Vancomycin plus Gentamicin plus Rifampin
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Patients or next of kin willing to sign consent to be randomized by social security number to one of the treatments.
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
64 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Baylor College of Medicine
OTHER
Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center
FED
Principal Investigators
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Daniel M Musher, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston VA Medical Center
Locations
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Baylor College of Medicine
Houston, Texas, United States
Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center
Houston, Texas, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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H-17556
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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