Viewing Study NCT07211620


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Study NCT ID: NCT07211620
Status: NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Last Update Posted: 2025-11-20
First Post: 2025-09-21
Is NOT Gene Therapy: False
Has Adverse Events: False

Brief Title: KInetics of Procalcitonin to Reduce Unnecessary aNtibiotic Use - Comparing Procalcitonin Kinetics-guided and Absolute Procalcitonin Value-guided Antibiotic Initiation in Reducing Unnecessary Antibiotic Use in Critically Ill Patients
Sponsor: Semmelweis University
Organization:

Study Overview

Official Title: KInetics of Procalcitonin to Reduce Unnecessary aNtibiotic Use (KIPRUN) - Protocol for a Multi-center, Randomized, Superiority Trial to Compare the Efficacy and Safety of Procalcitonin Kinetics-guided and Absolute Procalcitonin Value-guided Antibiotic Initiation in Reducing Unnecessary Antibiotic Therapy in Critically Ill Patients
Status: NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Status Verified Date: 2025-09
Last Known Status: None
Delayed Posting: No
If Stopped, Why?: Not Stopped
Has Expanded Access: False
If Expanded Access, NCT#: N/A
Has Expanded Access, NCT# Status: N/A
Acronym: KIPRUN
Brief Summary: The study aims to compare the efficacy and safety of an absolute procalcitonin (PCT) value-guided antibiotic initiation protocol and a protocol using the kinetics of PCT (the difference between the actual and the previous day value) in hemodynamically stable critically ill patients with suspected new-onset infection on admission or during ICU stay.

The main question it aims to answer:

* Can the investigators decrease the number of unnecessary AB therapies using the kinetics of PCT insted of using absolute PCT values?
* Is it safe to use PCT kinetics together with the clinical picture to guide AB initiation? AB therapy will be initiated according to predefined PCT protocols (Kinetics and Absolute Group). After 72 hours of treatment, an independent multidisciplinary team (infectologist, microbiologist and intensivist) will decide about the necessity of the treatment with all the relevant results in hand.
Detailed Description: Appropriate antibiotic (AB) therapy is still a big challenge in intensive care units today. More than 50% of our patients are considered potentially infected, and infection alone can double mortality; however, infection is later confirmed in less than 60% of patients admitted with the initial diagnosis of sepsis. According to previous studies, at least every fifth patient in intensive care units receives unnecessary antibiotics (ABs), leading to the well-known adverse effects of ABs without any benefit. The emergence of AB resistance has been associated with 700,000 avoidable deaths in 2014, and WHO estimates that it will contribute to the death of 10 million people by 2050.

Procalcitonin (PCT) is one of the most studied inflammatory biomarkers. Several randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and their meta-analyses concluded that PCT-guided antibiotic treatment could reduce the length of AB therapy without adverse effects; moreover, it may be associated with reduced 28-day mortality, which was also confirmed by our study in 2023. Accordingly, the current sepsis guideline recommends the combined evaluation of the clinical picture and PCT when stopping AB therapy; however, it contains a weak recommendation against using PCT when starting the treatment. The latter proposition is based on three studies with a significant number of surgical patients (around 40%) in two of them, in whom the applied PCT cut-off (0.5-1 ng/ml) presumably was too low, supported by several previous studies. Therefore, the overuse of ABs was more or less hardcoded into the protocol.

Kinetics of an inflammatory biomarker can carry much more information about the host response to infection instead of a single value. In a prospective observational study by Trasy et al., early PCT kinetics (PCT change between the day of suspected infection and the previous 24 hours) predicted infection, while PCT did not change in the group of patients in whom the infection was later ruled out. Tsangaris and his colleagues measured PCT daily in critically ill patients. The investigators noted a two-fold increase in PCT levels between the day of fever onset and the previous day if the patients had an infection, while there was no difference in the PCT values if the participants had no infection.

Based on these findings, the investigators created a protocol to reduce the number of unnecessary antibiotic therapies using the kinetics of PCT.

Study Oversight

Has Oversight DMC: True
Is a FDA Regulated Drug?: False
Is a FDA Regulated Device?: False
Is an Unapproved Device?: None
Is a PPSD?: None
Is a US Export?: None
Is an FDA AA801 Violation?: