Advanced Diagnostics for Enhanced QUality of Antibiotic Prescription in Respiratory Tract Infections in Emergency Rooms

NCT ID: NCT04781530

Last Updated: 2025-04-18

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

522 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2021-07-07

Study Completion Date

2024-01-25

Brief Summary

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This study is a randomized controlled trial where participants are randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either a rapid test group or a control group. Standard care is provided in the control group. Follow-up is conducted until discharge from the hospital, followed by telephone check-ins and completion of questionnaires by the participants themselves or their proxies until 30 days after randomization. Children of any age presenting at selected participating sites with acute respiratory tract infections, where initial treatment decisions are uncertain, are eligible to participate. The study aims to enrol 520 participants and involves Paediatric Emergency Rooms across Europe.

Detailed Description

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Background. Community-acquired acute respiratory tract infections (CA-ARTI) are among the most frequent infectious diseases worldwide. Uncomplicated ARTI is the most frequent cause of inappropriate antibiotic use, and there is a need of more judicious antibiotic prescribing to prevent exposure to drug-related adverse events and selection of antibiotic resistance. There is a need to assess the impact of rapid syndromic diagnostic testing in patients with CA-ARTI presenting to Emergency Rooms on clinical decision making related to hospitalisation and prescription of antibiotics. At the same time it must be determined whether the decisions guided by the rapid syndromic diagnostic testing results do not compromise patient safety.

Trial objective: To assess the impact of rapid diagnostic testing in patients with ARTI at the emergency department, on (1) hospital admission rates, (2) antimicrobial prescriptions (days of treatment) and (3) non-inferiority in terms of clinical outcome.

Secondary objectives include health care utilisation, time away from school or routine childcare arrangements and quality of life.

In an ancillary study, changing patterns in microbiological colonisation of the oropharynx following different management strategies will be assessed in a subset of participants.

Study design: Individually randomised controlled trial, randomisation 1:1 to either a rapid test group (intervention described below) or a control group, with management according to standard of care at the local facility. Follow-up until discharge from hospital and thereafter by telephone follow-up and self (or proxy)-completion questionnaires until 30 days after randomisation.

Study population: Children of any age consulting in selected participating sites with CA-ARTI, in which there is initial uncertainty about treatment and management decisions, after provision of informed consent by parent(s) or legal guardian.

Study Intervention: The diagnostic intervention is rapid syndromic testing on a nasopharyngeal swab with BioFire FilmArray Respiratory Panel 2.1 plus (RP2.1plus) (licensed for routine use at all trial sites), results expected within four hours from sample collection.

Co-primary endpoints:

Hierarchical nested analysis design of:

* Days alive out of hospital (superiority endpoint), within 14 days after study enrolment
* Days on Therapy (DOT) with antibiotics (superiority endpoint), within 14 days after study enrolment

Secondary endpoints Adverse outcome (non-inferiority safety endpoint)

•Safety endpoint: For initially hospitalised patients: i) any readmission, ii) ICU admission =\> 24 hours after hospitalisation, or iii) death, within 30 days after study enrolment

For initially non-admitted patients: any admission or death within 30 days after study enrolment.

* Direct costs and indirect costs within 30 days after enrolment.
* Change in quality of life as determined by EQ-5D-5L (or suitable alternative for age), days away from usual childcare routine or school and healthcare utilisation on day 1, 14, and 30 after enrolment.
* Microbiological results obtained as standard of care and with the diagnostic intervention
* Empirical antibiotics, antibiotic type switches, de-escalation based on antimicrobial agent categories. Prescription of antivirals during the main study.
* Detection of antimicrobial resistance (carriage or infection) related to the diagnostic intervention results compared to standard of care and impact on antimicrobial stewardship guidelines and prevention of hospital acquired infections.
* Impact on decisions regarding isolation measures related to test result.

Conditions

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Community-acquired Acute Lower Respiratory Infection

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

DIAGNOSTIC

Blinding Strategy

NONE

The trial is unblinded / open-label.

Study Groups

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Intervention (Device)

Diagnostic Test: BioFire

A molecular rapid syndromic testing platform, using the following panel:

BioFire FilmArray Respiratory Panel 2.1 plus (RP2.1plus) In addition to standard of care

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

BioFire FilmArray Respiratory Panel 2.1 plus (RP2.1plus)

Intervention Type DEVICE

BioFire FilmArray Respiratory Panel 2.1 plus (RP2.1plus): Nasopharyngeal swab

Control (Standard of Care)

Standard of Care

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

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BioFire FilmArray Respiratory Panel 2.1 plus (RP2.1plus)

BioFire FilmArray Respiratory Panel 2.1 plus (RP2.1plus): Nasopharyngeal swab

Intervention Type DEVICE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

1. Children of any age presenting to the Emergency Room with an acute illness (present for 14 days or less) with Temperature ≥38.0°C measured at presentation or reported within the previous 24 hours

AND at least two of the below:
* Cough
* Abnormal sounds on chest auscultation (crackles, reduced breath sounds, bronchial breathing, wheezing)
* Clinical signs of dyspnea (chest indrawing, nasal flaring, grunting)
* Signs of respiratory dysfunction: tachypnoea for age or decreased oxygen saturation (\<92% in room air)
* Signs of reduced general state: poor feeding, vomiting or lethargy/drowsiness
2. At time of screening:

* Patient has undergone first assessment by managing clinical team (doctor or nurse, incl. triage)
* Hospitalisation is not yet determined, i.e. neither by clinical presentation definitely requiring hospitalisation (e.g. per local guideline) nor by fixed decision of managing clinical team; admission to a short-stay unit or surveillance unit is not considered a hospitalisation for this trial
* Antibiotic treatment or hospitalisation is being considered
* The rapid syndromic diagnostic test result can be awaited for up to 4 hours before the decision to discharge the patient or to initiate antibiotic treatment is made

Exclusion Criteria

1. Development of ARTI more than 48 hours after hospital admission (hospital acquired);
2. Patients with a severe underlying medical condition dictating management decisions including hospitalisation and/or antibiotic treatment (e.g cystic fibrosis, immunosuppression);
3. Less than 14 days since the last episode of respiratory tract infection;
4. Confirmed pregnancy and/or breastfeeding;
5. Any clinically significant abnormality identified at the time of screening that in the judgment of the Investigator would preclude safe completion of the study or constrain endpoints assessment such as major systemic diseases or patients with short life expectancy;
6. Inability to obtain informed consent;
7. Alternative noninfectious diagnosis that explains clinical symptoms.
Maximum Eligible Age

17 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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BioMérieux

INDUSTRY

Sponsor Role collaborator

Universiteit Antwerpen

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

St George's, University of London

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

University Children's Hospital Basel

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

PENTA Foundation

NETWORK

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Julia Bielicki, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

St George's, University of London

Locations

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University Children's Hospital Tuebingen

Tübingen, , Germany

Site Status

Hippokration Hospital of Thessaloniki

Thessaloniki, , Greece

Site Status

Hospital Universitario 12 de Octubre, Spain

Madrid, , Spain

Site Status

University Children's Hospital Basel (UKBB)

Basel, Canton of Basel-City, Switzerland

Site Status

Ospedale Regionale Bellinzona e Valli

Bellinzona, , Switzerland

Site Status

University Hospital of Lewisham

London, , United Kingdom

Site Status

Countries

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Germany Greece Spain Switzerland United Kingdom

References

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ADEQUATE Paediatric Trial Group. Randomised multicentre effectiveness trial of rapid syndromic testing by panel assay in children presenting to European emergency departments with acute respiratory infections-trial protocol for the ADEQUATE Paediatric trial. BMJ Open. 2024 Apr 25;14(4):e076338. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-076338.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 38670622 (View on PubMed)

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol

View Document

Document Type: Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Other Identifiers

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ADEQUATE

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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