Centre for Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, Westmead Hospital, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Department of Infectious Diseases, Blacktown Hospital, 18 Blacktown Road, Blacktown, NSW, 2148, Australia.
Trials. 2019 Jun 13;20(1):353. doi: 10.1186/s13063-019-3452-y.
Exotoxins are important virulence factors in Staphylococcus aureus. Clindamycin, a protein synthesis inhibitor antibiotic, is thought to limit exotoxin production and improve outcomes in severe S. aureus infections. However, randomised prospective data to support this are lacking.
An open-label, multicentre, randomised controlled trial (RCT) will compare outcome differences in severe S. aureus infection between standard treatment (flucloxacillin/cefazolin in methicillin-susceptible S. aureus; and vancomycin/daptomycin in methicillin-resistant S. aureus) and standard treatment plus an additional clindamycin given for 7 days. We will include a minimum of 60 participants (both adult and children) in the pilot study. Participants will be enrolled within 72 h of an index culture. Severe infections will include septic shock, necrotising pneumonia, or multifocal and non-contiguous skin and soft tissue/osteoarticular infections. Individuals who are immunosuppressed, moribund, with current severe diarrhoea or Clostridiodes difficile infection, pregnant, and those with anaphylaxis to β-lactams or lincosamides will be excluded. The primary outcomes measure is the number of days alive and free (1 or 0) of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) within the first 14 days post randomisation. The secondary outcomes measure will include all-cause mortality at 14, 42, and 90 days, time to resolution of SIRS, proportion with microbiological treatment failure, and rate of change of C-reactive protein over time. Impacts of inducible clindamycin resistance, strain types, methicillin susceptibility, and presence of various exotoxins will also be analysed.
This study will assess the effect of adjunctive clindamycin on patient-centred outcomes in severe, toxin-mediated S. aureus infections. The pilot study will provide feasibility for a much larger RCT.
Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry, ACTRN12617001416381p . Registered on 6 October 2017.
外毒素是金黄色葡萄球菌的重要毒力因子。克林霉素是一种蛋白合成抑制剂抗生素,被认为可以限制外毒素的产生,并改善严重金黄色葡萄球菌感染的预后。然而,目前缺乏支持这一观点的随机前瞻性数据。
一项开放标签、多中心、随机对照试验(RCT)将比较严重金黄色葡萄球菌感染患者在标准治疗(甲氧西林敏感金黄色葡萄球菌使用氟氯西林/头孢唑林;甲氧西林耐药金黄色葡萄球菌使用万古霉素/达托霉素)基础上加用克林霉素治疗 7 天的结局差异。我们将在初步研究中纳入至少 60 名参与者(包括成人和儿童)。参与者将在指数培养物后 72 小时内入组。严重感染包括败血症性休克、坏死性肺炎、多灶性和非连续性皮肤和软组织/骨关节炎感染。排除免疫抑制、病危、目前有严重腹泻或艰难梭菌感染、孕妇以及对β-内酰胺类或林可酰胺类过敏的患者。主要结局指标是随机分组后 14 天内存活且无全身炎症反应综合征(SIRS)(1 或 0)的天数。次要结局指标包括 14、42 和 90 天的全因死亡率、SIRS 缓解时间、微生物治疗失败的比例以及 C 反应蛋白随时间的变化率。还将分析可诱导克林霉素耐药、菌株类型、甲氧西林敏感性以及各种外毒素的存在的影响。
这项研究将评估辅助克林霉素对严重、毒素介导的金黄色葡萄球菌感染患者的患者为中心结局的影响。初步研究将为更大规模的 RCT 提供可行性。
澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册中心,ACTRN12617001416381p。于 2017 年 10 月 6 日注册。