Biomarker-guided antibiotic stewardship in suspected ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAPrapid2): a randomised controlled trial and process evaluation

Thomas P Hellyer(Newcastle University), Daniel F. McAuley(Royal Victoria Hospital), Timothy Walsh(The Queen's Medical Research Institute), Niall Anderson(University of Edinburgh), Andrew Conway Morris(University of Cambridge), Suveer Singh(Imperial College London), Paul Dark(University of Manchester), Alistair Roy(City Hospital), Gavin D. Perkins(University of Warwick), Ronan McMullan(Queen's University Belfast), Lydia M. Emerson(Queen's University Belfast), Bronagh Blackwood(Queen's University Belfast), Stephen E. Wright(Freeman Hospital), Kallirroi Kefala(Edinburgh Royal Infirmary), Cecilia O’Kane(Queen's University Belfast), Simon Baudouin(Royal Victoria Infirmary), Ross Paterson(Western General Hospital), Anthony Rostron(Sunderland Royal Hospital), Ashley Agus(University of Ulster), Jonathan Bannard‐Smith(Manchester Royal Infirmary), Nicole Robin(Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Foundation Trust), Ingeborg Welters(University of Liverpool), Christopher Bassford(University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust), Bryan Yates(Northumbria Specialist Emergency Care Hospital), Craig Spencer(Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Shondipon Laha(Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Jonathan Hulme(Sandwell & West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust), Stephen Bonner(South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Vanessa Linnett(Gateshead Health NHS Foundation Trust), Julian Sonksen(Russells Hall Hospital), Tina Van Den Broeck, Gert Boschman, DW James Keenan, Jonathan Scott(Newcastle University), A. Joy Allen(Newcastle University), Glenn Phair(Royal Victoria Hospital), Jennie Parker(Newcastle University), Susan A Bowett(Newcastle University), A. John Simpson(Newcastle University)
The Lancet Respiratory Medicine
December 3, 2019
Cited by 120Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ventilator-associated pneumonia is the most common intensive care unit (ICU)-acquired infection, yet accurate diagnosis remains difficult, leading to overuse of antibiotics. Low concentrations of IL-1β and IL-8 in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid have been validated as effective markers for exclusion of ventilator-associated pneumonia. The VAPrapid2 trial aimed to determine whether measurement of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid IL-1β and IL-8 could effectively and safely improve antibiotic stewardship in patients with clinically suspected ventilator-associated pneumonia. METHODS: colony forming units per mL of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. The primary outcome was the distribution of antibiotic-free days in the 7 days following bronchoalveolar lavage. Data were analysed on an intention-to-treat basis, with an additional per-protocol analysis that excluded patients randomly assigned to the intervention group who defaulted to routine use of antibiotics because of failure to return an adequate biomarker result. An embedded process evaluation assessed factors influencing trial adoption, recruitment, and decision making. This study is registered with ISRCTN, ISRCTN65937227, and ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01972425. FINDINGS: Between Nov 6, 2013, and Sept 13, 2016, 360 patients were screened for inclusion in the study. 146 patients were ineligible, leaving 214 who were recruited to the study. Four patients were excluded before randomisation, meaning that 210 patients were randomly assigned to biomarker-guided recommendation on antibiotics (n=104) or routine use of antibiotics (n=106). One patient in the biomarker-guided recommendation group was withdrawn by the clinical team before bronchoscopy and so was excluded from the intention-to-treat analysis. We found no significant difference in the primary outcome of the distribution of antibiotic-free days in the 7 days following bronchoalveolar lavage in the intention-to-treat analysis (p=0·58). Bronchoalveolar lavage was associated with a small and transient increase in oxygen requirements. Established prescribing practices, reluctance for bronchoalveolar lavage, and dependence on a chain of trial-related procedures emerged as factors that impaired trial processes. INTERPRETATION: Antibiotic use remains high in patients with suspected ventilator-associated pneumonia. Antibiotic stewardship was not improved by a rapid, highly sensitive rule-out test. Prescribing culture, rather than poor test performance, might explain this absence of effect. FUNDING: UK Department of Health and the Wellcome Trust.


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