Overview

Short-course Antibiotic Treatment in Gram-positive Cocci Infective Endocarditis

Status:
Recruiting
Trial end date:
2022-09-30
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
Background: it is well known that most serious complications of infective endocarditis (IE) appear in the so-called "critical phase" of the disease, which are the first days after diagnosis. Subsequently, the vast majority of patients who overcome this acute phase has a favourable evolution, and usually stay in the hospital for a long time only to complete antibiotic therapy. In stable patients with adequate response to antibiotic treatment, without signs of persistent infection or metastatic foci such as spondylodiscitis, it is likely that a shorter antibiotic regimen would be an efficient and safe alternative, as has already been confirmed in patients with IE on tricuspid valves caused by a microorganism considered virulent such as S. aureus. This attractive alternative would improve patients' quality of life, save costs, and decrease the risk of complications related to the adverse effects of prolonged antibiotic treatment. Objectives: to compare the incidence of the composite endpoint of all-cause mortality, unplanned cardiac surgery, symptomatic embolisms and relapses within 6 months after the inclusion between patients with IE caused by gram-positive cocci receiving a short-course of 2 weeks of antibiotic therapy and those patients receiving conventional antibiotic therapy (4-6 weeks). Methodology: multicenter, prospective, randomized, controlled open-label, phase IV clinical trial. Sample: patients with IE caused by gram-positive cocci, having received at least 10 days of conventional antibiotic treatment, and at least 7 days after surgery when indicated, without clinical, analytical, microbiological or echocardiographic signs of persistent infection. Estimated sample size: 298 patients. Intervention: Control group: standard antibiotic therapy, according to ESC guidelines recommendations, for 4 to 6 weeks. Experimental group: short-course antibiotic therapy for 2 weeks. The prevalence of previously known risk factors for adverse events will be compared between the two groups to confirm that randomization have worked properly. The incidence of the composite endpoint of all-cause mortality, unplanned cardiac surgery, symptomatic embolisms and relapses within 6 months after the inclusion in the study will be prospectively registered and compared.
Phase:
Phase 4
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Carmen Olmos Blanco
Treatments:
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Antibiotics, Antitubercular
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Definite IE, according to modified ESC 2015 criteria, caused by gram-positive cocci
(staphylococci, streptococci and enterococci), including native, prosthetic valve IE
and cardiac device-related IE.

- 18 years old or older.

- Patients treated for at least 10 days of appropriate parenteral antibiotic therapy
overall (according to guidelines and microbiology sensitivity testing), and at least 7
days of parenteral antibiotic therapy after valve surgery when indicated.

- Absence of fever, microbiological or analytical findings suggesting persistent
infection at randomization.

- Absence of locally uncontrolled infection signs (abscess, pseudoaneurysm, fistula,
enlarging vegetation) at randomization, confirmed by recent transesophageal
echocardiography (performed within 48 h of randomization).

- Women of childbearing potential who will agree to the use of effective contraceptive
methods while on antibiotic treatment.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Patients who have received appropriate parenteral antibiotic therapy for infective
endocarditis for more than 12 days.

- Patients not suitable to be discharged after 10 days of conventional treatment, due to
clinical reasons (sequels of stroke that prevent discharge, progressive renal failure,
hepatic failure).

- Patients receiving chemotherapy or immunosuppressive therapy.

- Pregnant or breastfeeding women.

- Need of prolonged antibiotic therapy due to spondylodiscitis or other septic
complication.

- Absence of patient's ability or commitment to continue follow-up after being
discharged from hospital.

- Inability to give informed consent to participation.

- Cognitive impairment or lack of language skills needed to complete the questionnaires.

- Patients who meet urgent cardiac surgery ESC criteria but are considered inoperable
due to high surgical risk.