18-fluorodeoxyglucose Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography in S. Aureus Bacteraemia
NCT ID: NCT05361135
Last Updated: 2023-05-15
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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NOT_YET_RECRUITING
NA
820 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-09-30
2026-07-31
Brief Summary
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To improve survival for patients with these life-threatening infections, it is vital that doctors find the focus of S. aureus bacteraemia as quickly as possible. However, the research team do not know the best way to do this. Most patients with S. aureus bacteraemia have a chest X-ray and a scan of the heart valves. Patients may go to the scanning department lots of times while doctors try to work out where these foci are. This is uncomfortable and takes a lot of time. In about 1 in 5 cases the doctors still cannot find the focus. This is very worrying for patients, their relatives and doctors.
This study has been designed by researchers, doctors and patient advocates. It aims to work out if fewer patients may die when a specific type of scan called a 'PET/CT' is done quickly, because it finds more foci. To do this the team plan to do a clinical trial in patients with S. aureus bacteraemia. Half of the patients will receive the usual tests that patients currently get and the other half will receive an extra scan as soon as possible. The patients will be chosen randomly (like the flip of a coin) to go into one of the 2 groups. A year into the trial, an independent committee will check the results to make sure the extra scan is finding more foci. If this is the case, the trial will carry on. At the end of the study, we will share the results globally. The findings are expected to change the way this dangerous condition is managed, so patients do better.
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Detailed Description
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Positron emission tomography/computed tomography (usually with 18-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG), denoted PET/CT) is increasingly available worldwide. The role of PET/CT to rapidly detect deep infectious foci in SAB is becoming clearer with increasing use. The European Medicines Agency licensed FDG for use in PET/CT investigation of bacteraemia based on observational studies. Single-centre observational studies have found PET/CT detected infectious foci in the majority of cases of SAB. A prospective matched cohort study found a suggestion of improved survival with the use of PET/CT, though the rates of solid malignancies and nosocomial infection were higher in the control group. This is a multi-centre randomised controlled trial (RCT) of PET/CT in SAB.
The hypothesis is that PET/CT within 14 days of platform entry to SNAP enables the detection of new foci of infection leading to improved clinical outcomes.
The null hypothesis is that a composite of 90-day all-cause mortality or microbiological relapse or microbiological treatment failure will not be changed by early PET/CT in SAB.
Primary outcome:
A composite of 90-day all-cause mortality or microbiological relapse or microbiological treatment failure 90 days after platform entry.
Secondary outcomes:
The detection of new foci between 0 and 90 days after platform entry. The presence of new foci will be determined by the site investigator and can incorporate clinical, radiological, microbiological and pathological findings.
The presence of new foci will be determined by the site investigator and can incorporate clinical, radiological, microbiological and pathological findings.
All cause mortality at 90 days after platform entry Duration of survival censored at 90 days after platform entry. Length of stay of acute index inpatient hospitalisation for those surviving until hospital discharge (excluding or including HITH/COPAT/OPAT/rehab) truncated at 90 days after platform entry Time to being discharged alive from the total index hospitalisation (excluding or including HITH/COPAT/OPAT/rehab) truncated at 90 days after platform entry.
Microbiological treatment failure defined as positive sterile site culture for S. aureus between 14 and 90 days after platform entry.
Total radiation exposure Patient Eligibility Criteria Inclusion criteria: Adult (≥18 years of age) and consented to the SNAP platform. Agrees to PET/CT.
Exclusion criteria:
Contraindication to PET/CT (including pregnancy/breast-feeding) PET/CT in the last 7 days or already planned to occur in the next 7 days.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
DIAGNOSTIC
SINGLE
Study Groups
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PET/CT
Enhanced imaging with PET/CT
PET/CT
Enhanced imaging with PET/CT
Routine Imaging
Standard of Care Imaging
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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PET/CT
Enhanced imaging with PET/CT
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Staphylococcus aureus complex grown from ≥1 blood culture
* Symptoms of S. aureus bloodstream infection
* Admitted to a participating hospital at the time of eligibility assessment . Agrees to PET/CT
Exclusion Criteria
* PET/CT in the last 7 days or already planned to occur in the next 7 days
* Treating team deems enrolment in the study is not in the best interest of the patient
* Treating team believes that death is imminent and inevitable
* Patient is for end-of-life care and PET/CT is considered not appropriate
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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King's College London
OTHER
University of Melbourne
OTHER
Menzies School of Health Research
OTHER
Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute
OTHER
Alliance Medical, UK
UNKNOWN
Rambam Health Care Campus
OTHER
University College, London
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Anna Goodman
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University College, London
Central Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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PET-SAB
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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