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Optimising Treatment Outcomes for Children and Adults Through Rapid Genome Sequencing of Sepsis Pathogens. A Study Protocol for a Prospective, Multi-Centre Trial (DIRECT)

BACKGROUND: Sepsis contributes significantly to morbidity and mortality globally. In Australia, 20,000 develop sepsis every year, resulting in 5,000 deaths, and more than AUD$846 million in expenditure. Prompt, appropriate antibiotic therapy is effective in improving outcomes in sepsis. Conventional...

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Autores principales: Irwin, Adam D., Coin, Lachlan J. M., Harris, Patrick N. A., Cotta, Menino Osbert, Bauer, Michelle J., Buckley, Cameron, Balch, Ross, Kruger, Peter, Meyer, Jason, Shekar, Kiran, Brady, Kara, Fourie, Cheryl, Sharp, Natalie, Vlad, Luminita, Whiley, David, Beatson, Scott A., Forde, Brian M., Paterson, David, Clark, Julia, Hajkowicz, Krispin, Raman, Sainath, Bialasiewicz, Seweryn, Lipman, Jeffrey, Schlapbach, Luregn J., Roberts, Jason A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8261237/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34249774
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2021.667680
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author Irwin, Adam D.
Coin, Lachlan J. M.
Harris, Patrick N. A.
Cotta, Menino Osbert
Bauer, Michelle J.
Buckley, Cameron
Balch, Ross
Kruger, Peter
Meyer, Jason
Shekar, Kiran
Brady, Kara
Fourie, Cheryl
Sharp, Natalie
Vlad, Luminita
Whiley, David
Beatson, Scott A.
Forde, Brian M.
Paterson, David
Clark, Julia
Hajkowicz, Krispin
Raman, Sainath
Bialasiewicz, Seweryn
Lipman, Jeffrey
Schlapbach, Luregn J.
Roberts, Jason A.
author_facet Irwin, Adam D.
Coin, Lachlan J. M.
Harris, Patrick N. A.
Cotta, Menino Osbert
Bauer, Michelle J.
Buckley, Cameron
Balch, Ross
Kruger, Peter
Meyer, Jason
Shekar, Kiran
Brady, Kara
Fourie, Cheryl
Sharp, Natalie
Vlad, Luminita
Whiley, David
Beatson, Scott A.
Forde, Brian M.
Paterson, David
Clark, Julia
Hajkowicz, Krispin
Raman, Sainath
Bialasiewicz, Seweryn
Lipman, Jeffrey
Schlapbach, Luregn J.
Roberts, Jason A.
author_sort Irwin, Adam D.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Sepsis contributes significantly to morbidity and mortality globally. In Australia, 20,000 develop sepsis every year, resulting in 5,000 deaths, and more than AUD$846 million in expenditure. Prompt, appropriate antibiotic therapy is effective in improving outcomes in sepsis. Conventional culture-based methods to identify appropriate therapy have limited yield and take days to complete. Recently, nanopore technology has enabled rapid sequencing with real-time analysis of pathogen DNA. We set out to demonstrate the feasibility and diagnostic accuracy of pathogen sequencing direct from clinical samples, and estimate the impact of this approach on time to effective therapy when integrated with personalised software-guided antimicrobial dosing in children and adults on ICU with sepsis. METHODS: The DIRECT study is a pilot prospective, non-randomized multicentre trial of an integrated diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm combining rapid direct pathogen sequencing and software-guided, personalised antibiotic dosing in children and adults with sepsis on ICU. PARTICIPANTS AND INTERVENTIONS: DIRECT will collect microbiological and pharmacokinetic samples from approximately 200 children and adults with sepsis admitted to one of four ICUs in Brisbane. In Phase 1, we will evaluate Oxford Nanopore Technologies MinION sequencing direct from blood in 50 blood culture-proven sepsis patients recruited from consecutive patients with suspected sepsis. In Phase 2, a further 50 consecutive patients with suspected sepsis will be recruited in whom MinION sequencing will be combined with Bayesian software-guided (ID-ODS) personalised antimicrobial dosing. OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary outcome is time to effective antimicrobial therapy, defined as trough drug concentrations above the MIC of the pathogen. Secondary outcomes are diagnostic accuracy of MinION sequencing from whole blood, time to pathogen identification and susceptibility testing using sequencing direct from whole blood and from positive blood culture broth. DISCUSSION: Rapid pathogen sequencing coupled with antimicrobial dosing software has great potential to overcome the limitations of conventional diagnostics which often result in prolonged inappropriate antimicrobial therapy. Reduced time to optimal antimicrobial therapy may reduce sepsis mortality and ICU length of stay. This pilot study will yield key feasibility data to inform further, urgently needed sepsis studies. Phase 2 of the trial protocol is registered with the ANZCTR (ACTRN12620001122943). TRIAL REGISTRATION: Registered with the Australia New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry Number ACTRN12620001122943
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spelling pubmed-82612372021-07-08 Optimising Treatment Outcomes for Children and Adults Through Rapid Genome Sequencing of Sepsis Pathogens. A Study Protocol for a Prospective, Multi-Centre Trial (DIRECT) Irwin, Adam D. Coin, Lachlan J. M. Harris, Patrick N. A. Cotta, Menino Osbert Bauer, Michelle J. Buckley, Cameron Balch, Ross Kruger, Peter Meyer, Jason Shekar, Kiran Brady, Kara Fourie, Cheryl Sharp, Natalie Vlad, Luminita Whiley, David Beatson, Scott A. Forde, Brian M. Paterson, David Clark, Julia Hajkowicz, Krispin Raman, Sainath Bialasiewicz, Seweryn Lipman, Jeffrey Schlapbach, Luregn J. Roberts, Jason A. Front Cell Infect Microbiol Cellular and Infection Microbiology BACKGROUND: Sepsis contributes significantly to morbidity and mortality globally. In Australia, 20,000 develop sepsis every year, resulting in 5,000 deaths, and more than AUD$846 million in expenditure. Prompt, appropriate antibiotic therapy is effective in improving outcomes in sepsis. Conventional culture-based methods to identify appropriate therapy have limited yield and take days to complete. Recently, nanopore technology has enabled rapid sequencing with real-time analysis of pathogen DNA. We set out to demonstrate the feasibility and diagnostic accuracy of pathogen sequencing direct from clinical samples, and estimate the impact of this approach on time to effective therapy when integrated with personalised software-guided antimicrobial dosing in children and adults on ICU with sepsis. METHODS: The DIRECT study is a pilot prospective, non-randomized multicentre trial of an integrated diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm combining rapid direct pathogen sequencing and software-guided, personalised antibiotic dosing in children and adults with sepsis on ICU. PARTICIPANTS AND INTERVENTIONS: DIRECT will collect microbiological and pharmacokinetic samples from approximately 200 children and adults with sepsis admitted to one of four ICUs in Brisbane. In Phase 1, we will evaluate Oxford Nanopore Technologies MinION sequencing direct from blood in 50 blood culture-proven sepsis patients recruited from consecutive patients with suspected sepsis. In Phase 2, a further 50 consecutive patients with suspected sepsis will be recruited in whom MinION sequencing will be combined with Bayesian software-guided (ID-ODS) personalised antimicrobial dosing. OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary outcome is time to effective antimicrobial therapy, defined as trough drug concentrations above the MIC of the pathogen. Secondary outcomes are diagnostic accuracy of MinION sequencing from whole blood, time to pathogen identification and susceptibility testing using sequencing direct from whole blood and from positive blood culture broth. DISCUSSION: Rapid pathogen sequencing coupled with antimicrobial dosing software has great potential to overcome the limitations of conventional diagnostics which often result in prolonged inappropriate antimicrobial therapy. Reduced time to optimal antimicrobial therapy may reduce sepsis mortality and ICU length of stay. This pilot study will yield key feasibility data to inform further, urgently needed sepsis studies. Phase 2 of the trial protocol is registered with the ANZCTR (ACTRN12620001122943). TRIAL REGISTRATION: Registered with the Australia New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry Number ACTRN12620001122943 Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC8261237/ /pubmed/34249774 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2021.667680 Text en Copyright © 2021 Irwin, Coin, Harris, Cotta, Bauer, Buckley, Balch, Kruger, Meyer, Shekar, Brady, Fourie, Sharp, Vlad, Whiley, Beatson, Forde, Paterson, Clark, Hajkowicz, Raman, Bialasiewicz, Lipman, Schlapbach and Roberts https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Cellular and Infection Microbiology
Irwin, Adam D.
Coin, Lachlan J. M.
Harris, Patrick N. A.
Cotta, Menino Osbert
Bauer, Michelle J.
Buckley, Cameron
Balch, Ross
Kruger, Peter
Meyer, Jason
Shekar, Kiran
Brady, Kara
Fourie, Cheryl
Sharp, Natalie
Vlad, Luminita
Whiley, David
Beatson, Scott A.
Forde, Brian M.
Paterson, David
Clark, Julia
Hajkowicz, Krispin
Raman, Sainath
Bialasiewicz, Seweryn
Lipman, Jeffrey
Schlapbach, Luregn J.
Roberts, Jason A.
Optimising Treatment Outcomes for Children and Adults Through Rapid Genome Sequencing of Sepsis Pathogens. A Study Protocol for a Prospective, Multi-Centre Trial (DIRECT)
title Optimising Treatment Outcomes for Children and Adults Through Rapid Genome Sequencing of Sepsis Pathogens. A Study Protocol for a Prospective, Multi-Centre Trial (DIRECT)
title_full Optimising Treatment Outcomes for Children and Adults Through Rapid Genome Sequencing of Sepsis Pathogens. A Study Protocol for a Prospective, Multi-Centre Trial (DIRECT)
title_fullStr Optimising Treatment Outcomes for Children and Adults Through Rapid Genome Sequencing of Sepsis Pathogens. A Study Protocol for a Prospective, Multi-Centre Trial (DIRECT)
title_full_unstemmed Optimising Treatment Outcomes for Children and Adults Through Rapid Genome Sequencing of Sepsis Pathogens. A Study Protocol for a Prospective, Multi-Centre Trial (DIRECT)
title_short Optimising Treatment Outcomes for Children and Adults Through Rapid Genome Sequencing of Sepsis Pathogens. A Study Protocol for a Prospective, Multi-Centre Trial (DIRECT)
title_sort optimising treatment outcomes for children and adults through rapid genome sequencing of sepsis pathogens. a study protocol for a prospective, multi-centre trial (direct)
topic Cellular and Infection Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8261237/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34249774
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2021.667680
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