Overview

Early Discontinuation of Antibiotic Therapy in Elderly Patients Hospitalized for a Viral Infection

Status:
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Trial end date:
2027-06-01
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
Among winter respiratory viruses, influenza is the most common and therefore responsible for the highest mortality, but parainfluenza and RSV viruses have an even higher risk of mortality (1.6 to 1.9 times), this toll being paid mainly by the elderly and co-morbid population. Futhermore, SARS-Cov2 will probably become endemic and/or epidemic with the same targets of fragile patients. These viral infections are serious, however a bacterial co-infection worsens the prognosis even more: excess risk of mortality = 2.6, 95% CI \[1.9-3.7\]. Although rare, these co-infections are the subject of a prescription of antibiotics in more than 50% of influenza infections or other serious viral infections. Mainly due to this excess risk of mortality associated with the difficulty of diagnosing these co-infections. Proper antibiotic use requires preventing this misuse and its harmful consequences in the short and long term at all costs. It is therefore imperative to have solid (grade A) evidence showing that antibiotic therapy in viral infections is not only futile but also potentially harmful.
Phase:
NA
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Amiens
Collaborators:
Centre Hospitalier de Beauvais
Centre Hospitalier Roubaix
CH SOISSONS
Hpital Les Bateliers, CHU de Lille
Tourcoing Hospital
University Hospital, Caen
University Hospital, Rouen
Treatments:
Anti-Bacterial Agents