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Performance of Emerging Microbiological Techniques for the Diagnosis of Severe Infections in Neutropenic Patients With Haematological Malignancies
Mortality due to bloodstream infections in patients with neutropenia and haematological malignancies is high and optimal management is hampered by long turnaround times of conventional blood cultures. This is an observational study to assess the performance of T2 magnetic resonance, in diagnosing proven, probable and possible bloodstream infections as well as its theoretical impact on antimicrobial prescriptions in neutropenic patients with acute leukemia and bone marrow recipients.
Study Background In patients with haematological malignancies, neutropenia often leads to the development of severe infections, including bloodstream, which are characterized by high mortality. Patients' management can be challenging as conventional diagnostic methods for the diagnosis of such infections are affected by several limitations, including limited sensitivity and long turnaround time. T2 Magnetic Resonance (T2MR) is a new technology able to identify pathogens directly from whole blood in few hours, and preliminary data showed how it might have higher sensitivity compared to blood cultures. Study Aims * To assess the performance of the T2MR (including the T2Candida, T2Bacteria and T2Resistance) in diagnosing proven, probable, and possible bloodstream infection (BSI) due to T2 on-panel pathogens, in patients affected by haematological malignancies with febrile neutropenia, including patients with acute leukaemia and bone marrow transplant recipients. * To assess the mean time to results of the T2MR 3 panels as compared to blood cultures. These will be considered as an estimate of time to optimal treatment in proven, probable, and possible BSI. * To estimate the potential impact of T2MR results on antimicrobial modifications in neutropenic patients with proven/probable and possible BSI. Methods Prospective observational study. Patients with acute leukemia or bone marrow transplant recipients and febrile neutropenia, admitted to the Haematology ward, will be consecutively enrolled in the study. 100 consecutive febrile episodes will be included in the study. At the time of blood culture collection (ordered as per standard of care), blood samples for T2MR (including T2Bacteria, T2Candida and T2Resistance) will be also collected. The performance of the T2 assays will be compared to that of proven, probable, and possible BSI defined by standard of care laboratory practices due to T2 on-panel pathogens, and time to results will be assessed as an estimate of time to optimal treatment. Moreover the potential impact of T2 positive results on antimicrobial modifications will be estimated including escalation, de-escalation and antimicrobial change. Proven BSI is defined by a positive blood culture; probable BSI is defined by a negative blood culture but a positive T2 result if the T2-detected organism is isolated within 21 days from another clinical specimen; possible BSI is defined as a negative blood culture but a positive T2 result in the absence of supporting culture data if the T2-detected organism or resistance gene was a plausible cause of infection. Data analysis Sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values will be calculated using proven, probable, and possible BSI as a reference, with 95% confidence intervals. Mean time to T2 results will be compared to mean time to blood cultures results.
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Royal Brisbane Hospital
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Start Date
January 10, 2023
Primary Completion Date
July 1, 2023
Completion Date
July 1, 2023
Last Updated
May 22, 2023
100
ESTIMATED participants
T2 magnetic resonance
DIAGNOSTIC_TEST
Lead Sponsor
The University of Queensland
NCT06293677
NCT06787326
Data Source & Attribution
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View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT04948463