Title

Candida in the Respiratory Tract Secretions of Critically Ill Patients and The Efficacy of Antifungal Treatment
Candida in the Respiratory Tract Secretions of Critically Ill Patients and The Efficacy of Antifungal Treatment (The CANTREAT Study): A Prospective, Randomized, Double Blind, Placebo Controlled Pilot Study
  • Phase

    Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Study Participants

    61
The purpose of the study is to determine whether the effect of treating Candida spp. isolated in the respiratory tract secretions of patients with a clinical suspicion of ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP) on clinical outcomes will be feasible and supported by biomarker data obtained.
Candida spp. is commonly retrieved from microbiologic specimens of ICU patients with suspected VAP. It has been associated with increased systemic inflammation and worse clinical outcomes. This association may be due to the propensity for Candida to colonize those who are sicker, who have increased levels of systemic inflammation and worse clinical outcomes. However, an alternate possibility is that Candida is more than a colonizer and is responsible for the clinical and biochemical features observed. The only way to clarify the pathogenic role of Candida from this patient population is to treat the organism and see if patients improve compared to an untreated group. The purpose of this research program is to conduct such a study to determine if Candida in respiratory tract secretions should be routinely treated in critically ill patients. Since a definitive randomized controlled trial designed to demonstrate a reduction in mortality would be large, require the commitment of large amount of resources including both time and money, the investigators propose to first conduct a small pilot feasibility study.

Eligible patients will be randomized to receive antifungal treatment with anidulafungin or placebo. Following enrollment, study treatment (or placebo) will be started as soon as possible. When the Candida or yeast organisms have been speciated and/or a susceptibility profile is known, the study medication will be adjusted based on susceptibility patterns. The investigators propose to treat with antifungal therapy for a total of 14 days.

Patients will be followed daily for their entire stay in ICU or till day 28, whichever comes first. For patients discharged from the ICU to the ward, they will be followed until study treatment is complete (i.e. day 14). Mortality will be determined for the ICU stay, hospital stay and at 90 days. The investigators will record admission and discharge dates to ICU, step down units, and to hospital.

All patients will have 13 mL of blood/day drawn at baseline, day 3, day 8 and at the end of the treatment period on day 14 (or last day of treatment). The samples will be prepared on site and shipped to a central lab for processing. The investigators will use the blood specimens to measure markers of inflammation (C-reactive protein, Procalcitonin, and Interleukin-6 and others as determined by the investigators), markers of candida presence (b-glucan and other potential future markers) and markers of immune dysfunction (to be determined by investigators).
Study Started
Apr 30
2010
Primary Completion
Aug 31
2012
Study Completion
Aug 31
2012
Results Posted
Feb 01
2021
Last Update
Feb 01
2021

Other Normal Saline

Normal Saline

Drug anidulafungin

TBA

  • Other names: TBA

Placebo Placebo Comparator

Saline will serve as the placebo solution since the active comparator is clear and colourless.

Antifungal Active Comparator

Patient will receive a dose daily for a total of 14 days

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Adult patients (>18 years old)
In the ICU > 48 hours
Mechanically ventilated (>48 hours)
Grow a Candida spp. on respiratory tract secretion culture (either by Bronchoalveolar Lavage or Endotracheal Aspirate) taken on or between 48 hours before or after the day of their suspicion of respiratory tract infection.

Develop a clinical suspicion of respiratory tract infection while ventilated as defined by the following criteria (as defined previously in our VAP trial)5:

The presence of new, worsening or persistent radiographic features suggestive of pneumonia without another obvious cause AND

The presence of any two of the following:

Fever > 38C (core temperature)
Leukocytosis (>11.0 x109/L) or neutropenia (<3.5 x109/L)
Purulent endotracheal aspirates or change in character of aspirates
Isolation of pathogenic bacteria from endotracheal aspirates
Increasing oxygen requirements

Exclusion Criteria:

Patients not expected to be in ICU for more than 72 hours (due to imminent death, withdrawal of aggressive care or discharge).
Patients with Candida spp. in the blood or another sterile body site.
Patients colonized at other non-pulmonary body site(s) with Candida.
Already being treated with antifungal drugs (because of documented fungal infection, pre-emptive therapy, or prophylaxis).
Allergy to study drugs (Fluconazole or the Echinocandin on formulary at treating institution).
Immunocompromised patients (post-organ transplantation, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome [AIDS], neutropenia [<1000 absolute neutrophils], corticosteroids [>20 mgs/day of prednisone or equivalent for more than 6 months]). These patients are excluded since Candida may be more invasive and these patients are much more likely to require systemic antifungal therapy.
Patients with fulminant liver failure or end stage liver disease (Child's Class C).
Women who are pregnant or lactating.
Enrollment in industry sponsored interventional trial (co-enrollment in other academic studies would be allowed with the proviso that there was no potential interaction between the protocols).
Prior randomization in this study.

Summary

Placebo

Antifungal

All Events

Event Type Organ System Event Term

Overall Recruitment Rate

Overall recruitment rate per site

Overall

0.6
participants per site /month

Duration of Stay in ICU

Measure of the duration of participant stay in the ICU

Placebo

11.5
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 8.0 to 20.0

Antifungal

13.0
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 8.0 to 28.0

Ventilator Free Days

Number of days in ICU free of ventilation

Placebo

8.0
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 6.0 to 11.0

Antifungal

9.0
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 4.0 to 10.0

ICU Free Days

Number of days free of ICU

Placebo

14.0
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 0.0 to 17.0

Antifungal

4.0
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 0.0 to 17.0

Antibiotic Free Days 28-day Post Randomization

Number of days free of antibiotic use within the first 28 days

Placebo

16.0
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 12.0 to 20.0

Antifungal

10.0
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 0.0 to 20.0

Hospital Length of Stay

Measure of the duration of the participant's hospital stay

Placebo

29.0
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 17.0 to 38.0

Antifungal

28.0
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 18.0 to 46.0

(SOFA) Post Randomization

Sequential organ failure assessment. 0-24 The higher the number the more severe organ failure

Placebo

5.9
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 3.3

Antifungal

5.9
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 3.6

Sequential Procalcitonin

VAP withCandida

3.0
ng/ml (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 8.8

VAP Without Candida

22.5
ng/ml (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 89.4

C-reactive Protein

VAP Without Candida

145.7
mg/l (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 104

VAP withCandida

133.0
mg/l (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 115

Interleukin-6

VAP withCandida

97.5
pg/ml (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 183

VAP Without Candida

3.0
pg/ml (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 10.3

B-glucan Levels

VAP withCandida

116.0
pg/ml (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 171

VAP Without Candida

129.1
pg/ml (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 190.5

Total

60
Participants

Age, Continuous

60.3
years (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 15.5

Region of Enrollment

Sex: Female, Male

Overall Study

Placebo

Antifungal