Hospital Sírio-Libanês - São Paulo (SP), Brazil.
Brazilian Research in Intensive Care Network (BRICNet) - São Paulo (SP), Brazil.
Crit Care Sci. 2024 Aug 26;36:e20240029en. doi: 10.62675/2965-2774.20240029-en. eCollection 2024.
Ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis is a common condition among invasively ventilated patients in intensive care units, for which the best treatment strategy is currently unknown. We designed the VATICAN (Ventilator-Associated Tracheobronchitis Initiative to Conduct Antibiotic Evaluation) trial to assess whether a watchful waiting antibiotic treatment strategy is noninferior to routine antibiotic treatment for ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis regarding days free of mechanical ventilation.
VATICAN is a randomized, controlled, open-label, multicenter noninferiority trial. Patients with suspected ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis without evidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia or hemodynamic instability due to probable infection will be assigned to either a watchful waiting strategy, without antimicrobial administration for ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis and prescription of antimicrobials only in cases of ventilator-associated pneumonia, sepsis or septic shock, or another infectious diagnosis, or to a routine antimicrobial treatment strategy for seven days. The primary outcome will be mechanical ventilation-free days at 28 days, and a key secondary outcome will be ventilator-associated pneumonia-free survival. Through an intention-to-treat framework with a per-protocol sensitivity analysis, the primary outcome analysis will address noninferiority with a 20% margin, which translates to a 1.5 difference in ventilator-free days. Other analyses will follow a superiority analysis framework.
The VATICAN trial will follow all national and international ethical standards. We aim to publish the trial in a high-visibility general journal and present it at critical care and infectious disease conferences for dissemination. These results will likely be immediately applicable to the bedside upon trial completion and will provide information with a low risk of bias for guideline development.
呼吸机相关性气管支气管炎是重症监护病房中接受有创通气的患者常见的疾病,目前尚不清楚最佳的治疗策略。我们设计了 VATICAN(呼吸机相关性气管支气管炎抗生素评估研究)试验,以评估对于呼吸机相关性气管支气管炎,观察等待抗生素治疗策略是否不劣于常规抗生素治疗,从而使患者在机械通气期间保持无机械通气天数。
VATICAN 是一项随机、对照、开放标签、多中心非劣效性试验。疑似呼吸机相关性气管支气管炎但无呼吸机相关性肺炎或因可能感染导致血流动力学不稳定证据的患者将被分配至观察等待策略,即不对呼吸机相关性气管支气管炎进行抗菌治疗,仅在出现呼吸机相关性肺炎、脓毒症或脓毒性休克或其他感染性诊断时开具抗生素处方;或接受常规抗菌治疗策略 7 天。主要结局为 28 天无机械通气天数,关键次要结局为无呼吸机相关性肺炎存活天数。通过意向治疗框架和方案敏感性分析,主要结局分析将以 20%的差距评估非劣效性,这意味着无通气天数的差异为 1.5。其他分析将遵循优效性分析框架。
VATICAN 试验将遵循所有国家和国际伦理标准。我们旨在将该试验发表在高可见度的普通期刊上,并在重症监护和传染病会议上进行报告,以进行传播。这些结果很可能在试验完成后立即适用于临床,并提供低偏倚风险的信息,以用于指南制定。