Prevention of nosocomial infections in critically ill patients with lactoferrin (PREVAIL study): Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

John Muscedere, David Maslove, John Gordon Boyd, Nicole O'Callaghan, Francois Lamontagne, Steven Reynolds, Martin Albert, Rick Hall, Danielle McGolrick, Xuran Jiang, Andrew G. Day

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

5 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Background: Nosocomial infections remain an important source of morbidity, mortality, and increased health care costs in hospitalized patients. This is particularly problematic in intensive care units (ICUs) because of increased patient vulnerability due to the underlying severity of illness and increased susceptibility from utilization of invasive therapeutic and monitoring devices. Lactoferrin (LF) and the products of its breakdown have multiple biological effects, which make its utilization of interest for the prevention of nosocomial infections in the critically ill. Methods/design: This is a phase II randomized, multicenter, double-blinded trial to determine the effect of LF on antibiotic-free days in mechanically ventilated, critically ill, adult patients in the ICU. Eligible, consenting patients will be randomized to receive either LF or placebo. The treating clinician will remain blinded to allocation during the study; blinding will be maintained by using opaque syringes and containers. The primary outcome will be antibiotic-free days, defined as the number of days alive and free of antibiotics 28 days after randomization. Secondary outcomes will include: antibiotic utilization, adjudicated diagnosis of nosocomial infection (longer than 72 h of admission to ICU), hospital and ICU length of stay, change in organ function after randomization, hospital and 90-day mortality, incidence of tracheal colonization, changes in gastrointestinal permeability, and immune function. Outcomes to inform the conduct of a larger definitive trial will also be evaluated, including feasibility as determined by recruitment rates and protocol adherence. Discussion: The results from this study are expected to provide insight into a potential novel therapeutic use for LF in critically ill adult patients. Further, analysis of study outcomes will inform a future, large-scale phase III randomized controlled trial powered on clinically important outcomes related to the use of LF. Trial registration: The trial was registered at www.ClinicalTrials.govon 18 November 2013. Trial registration number: NCT01996579.

Idioma originalEnglish
Número de artículo474
PublicaciónTrials
Volumen17
N.º1
DOI
EstadoPublished - sep. 29 2016

Nota bibliográfica

Funding Information:
This study was funded by a grant from the John and Lotte Memorial Foundation (Vancouver, BC), the Innovation Fund from Queens University (Kingston, ON), and the McLaughlin Center (University of Toronto). The funders have had no role in the conceptualization and conduct of the study and will not have any role in study analysis.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 The Author(s).

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Medicine (miscellaneous)
  • Pharmacology (medical)

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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