Author:
,de Kretser Dana,Mora Jocelyn,Bloomfield Max,Campbell Anita,Cheng Matthew P,Guy Stephen,Hensgens Marjolein,Kalimuddin Shirin,Lee Todd C,Legg Amy,Mahar Robert K,Marks Michael,Marsh Julie,McGlothlin Anna,Morpeth Susan C,Sud Archana,Ten Oever Jaap,Yahav Dafna,Tong Steven Y C,Davis Joshua S,Walls Genevieve,Goodman Anna L,Bonten Marc,Bowen Asha C,Daneman Nick,van Hal Sebastiaan J,Heriot George S,Lewis Roger J,Lye David C,McQuilten Zoe,Paterson David L,Robinson J Owen,Roberts Jason A,Scarborough Matthew,Webb Steve A,Whiteway Lynda,
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Staphylococcus aureus bloodstream infection (bacteraemia) is traditionally treated with at least two weeks of IV antibiotics in adults, 3-7 days in children, and often longer for those with complicated disease. The current practice of treating S. aureus bacteraemia (SAB) with prolonged IV antibiotics (rather than oral antibiotics) is based on historical observational research and expert opinion. Prolonged IV antibiotic therapy has significant disadvantages for patients and healthcare systems, and there is growing interest in whether a switch to oral antibiotics following an initial period of IV therapy is a safe alternative for clinically stable patients.
Protocol
The early oral switch (EOS) domain of the S. aureus Network Adaptive Platform (SNAP) trial will assess early switch to oral antibiotics compared with continued IV treatment in clinically stable patients with SAB. The primary endpoint is 90-day all-cause mortality. Hospitalised SAB patients are assessed at platform day 7 +/- 2 (uncomplicated SAB) and day 14 +/-2 (complicated SAB) to determine their eligibility for randomisation to EOS (intervention) or continued IV treatment (current standard of care).
Discussion
Recruitment is occurring to the EOS domain of the SNAP trial. As of August 2023, 21% of all SNAP participants had been randomised to the EOS domain, a total of 264 participants across 77 centres, with an aim to recruit at least 1000 participants. We describe challenges and facilitators to enrolment in this domain to aid those planning similar trials.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)