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Elaboration of Consensus Clinical Endpoints to Evaluate Antimicrobial Treatment Efficacy in Future Hospital-acquired/Ventilator-associated Bacterial Pneumonia Clinical Trials

  • Emmanuel Weiss
  • , Jean-Ralph Zahar
  • , Jeff Alder
  • , Karim Asehnoune
  • , Matteo Bassetti
  • , Marc J. M. Bonten
  • , Jean Chastre
  • , Jan De Waele
  • , George Dimopoulos
  • , Philippe Eggimann
  • , Marc Engelhardt
  • , Santiago Ewig
  • , Marin Kollef
  • , Jeffrey Lipman
  • , Carlos Luna
  • , Ignacio Martin-Loeches
  • , Leonardo Pagani
  • , Lucy B. Palmer
  • , Laurent Papazian
  • , Garyphallia Poulakou
  • Philippe Prokocimer, Jordi Rello, John H. Rex, Andrew F. Shorr, George H. Talbot, Visanu Thamlikitkul, Antoni Torres, Richard G. Wunderink, Jean-Francois Timsit

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) in hospital-acquired and ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia (HABP and VABP, respectively) are important for the evaluation of new antimicrobials. However, the heterogeneity in endpoints used in RCTs evaluating treatment of HABP/VABP may puzzle clinicians. The aim of this work was to reach a consensus on clinical endpoints to consider in future clinical trials evaluating antimicrobial treatment efficacy for HABP/VABP. Methods: Twenty-six international experts from intensive care, infectious diseases, and the pharmaceutical industry were polled using the Delphi method. Results: The panel recommended a hierarchical composite endpoint including, by priority order, (1) survival at day 28, (2) mechanical ventilation-free days through day 28, and (3) clinical cure between study days 7 and 10 for VABP; and (1) survival (day 28) and (2) clinical cure (days 7-10) for HABP. Clinical cure was defined as the combination of resolution of signs and symptoms present at enrollment and improvement or lack of progression of radiological signs. More than 70% of the experts agreed to assess survival and mechanical ventilation-free days though day 28, and clinical cure between day 7 and day 10 after treatment initiation. Finally, the hierarchical order of endpoint components was reached after 3 Delphi rounds (72% agreement). Conclusions: We provide a multinational expert consensus on separate hierarchical composite endpoints for VABP and HABP, and on a definition of clinical cure that could be considered for use in future HABP/VABP clinical trials.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1912-1918
Number of pages7
JournalClinical Infectious Diseases
Volume69
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2019

Keywords

  • hospital-acquired bacterial pneumonia
  • multinational consensus
  • Delphi method
  • hierarchical composite endpoint
  • clinical cure

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