Procalcitonin Evaluation of Antibiotic Use in COVID-19 Hospitalised Patients (PEACH): Protocol for a Retrospective Observational Study

Author:

Euden JoanneORCID,Pallmann PhilipORCID,Grozeva Detelina,Albur MahableshwarORCID,Bond Stuart E.ORCID,Brookes-Howell Lucy,Dark Paul,Hellyer Thomas,Hopkins Susan,Howard Philip,Llewelyn Martin J.,Maboshe Wakunyambo,McCullagh Iain J.,Ogden Margaret,Parsons Helena,Partridge DavidORCID,Powell NeilORCID,Shaw DominickORCID,Shinkins Bethany,Szakmany TamasORCID,Todd StacyORCID,Thomas-Jones Emma,West Robert M.ORCID,Carrol Enitan D.ORCID,Sandoe Jonathan A. T.ORCID

Abstract

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is a novel virus responsible for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Although COVID-19 is a viral illness, many patients admitted to hospital are prescribed antibiotics, based on concerns that COVID-19 patients may experience secondary bacterial infections, and the assumption that they may respond well to antibiotic therapy. This has led to an increase in antibiotic use for some hospitalised patients at a time when accumulating antibiotic resistance is a major global threat to health. Procalcitonin (PCT) is an inflammatory marker measured in blood samples and widely recommended to help diagnose bacterial infections and guide antibiotic treatment. The PEACH study will compare patient outcomes from English and Welsh hospitals that used PCT testing during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic with those from hospitals not using PCT. It will help to determine whether, and how, PCT testing should be used in the NHS in future waves of COVID-19 to protect patients from antibiotic overuse. PEACH is a retrospective observational cohort study using patient-level clinical data from acute hospital Trusts and Health Boards in England and Wales. The primary objective is to measure the difference in antibiotic use between COVID-19 patients who did or did not have PCT testing at the time of diagnosis. Secondary objectives include measuring differences in length of stay, mortality, intensive care unit admission, and resistant bacterial infections between these groups.

Funder

National Institute of Health Research COVID Learning & Recovery

Health and Care Research Wales

University of Leeds, School of Medicine, Worsley Building, University of Leeds

NIHR Clinical Research Network

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),Structural Biology,Biotechnology

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