Optimised versus standard dosing of vancomycin in infants with Gram-positive sepsis (NeoVanc): a multicentre, randomised, open-label, phase 2b, non-inferiority trial

Vancomycin is the most widely used antibiotic for neonatal Gram-positive sepsis, but clinical outcome data of dosing strategies are scarce. The NeoVanc programme comprised extensive preclinical studies to inform a randomised controlled trial to assess optimised vancomycin dosing. We compared the eff...

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Veröffentlicht in:The lancet child & adolescent health 2022-01, Vol.6 (1), p.49-59
Hauptverfasser: Hill, Louise F, Clements, Michelle N, Turner, Mark A, Donà, Daniele, Lutsar, Irja, Jacqz-Aigrain, Evelyne, Heath, Paul T, Roilides, Emmanuel, Rawcliffe, Louise, Alonso-Diaz, Clara, Baraldi, Eugenio, Dotta, Andrea, Ilmoja, Mari-Liis, Mahaveer, Ajit, Metsvaht, Tuuli, Mitsiakos, George, Papaevangelou, Vassiliki, Sarafidis, Kosmas, Walker, A Sarah, Sharland, Michael, Clements, Michelle, Bafadal, Basma, Alarcon Allen, Ana, Anatolitou, Fani, Del Vecchio, Antonio, Giuffrè, Mario, Karachristou, Korina, Manzoni, Paolo, Martinelli, Stefano, Moriarty, Paul, Nika, Angeliki, Papaevangelou, Vana, Roehr, Charles, Sanchez Alcobendas, Laura, Siahanidou, Tania, Tzialla, Chryssoula, Bonadies, Luca, Booth, Nicola, Catalina Morales-Betancourt, Paola, Cordeiro, Malaika, de Alba Romero, Concha, de la Cruz, Javier, De Luca, Maia, Farina, Daniele, Franco, Caterina, Gialamprinou, Dimitra, Hallik, Maarja, Ilardi, Laura, Insinga, Vincenzo, Iosifidis, Elias, Kalamees, Riste, Kontou, Angeliki, Molnar, Zoltan, Nikaina, Eirini, Petropoulou, Chryssoula, Reyné, Mar, Tataropoulou, Kassandra, Triantafyllidou, Pinelopi, Vontzalidis, Adamantios, Sharland, Mike
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Zusammenfassung:Vancomycin is the most widely used antibiotic for neonatal Gram-positive sepsis, but clinical outcome data of dosing strategies are scarce. The NeoVanc programme comprised extensive preclinical studies to inform a randomised controlled trial to assess optimised vancomycin dosing. We compared the efficacy of an optimised regimen to a standard regimen in infants with late onset sepsis that was known or suspected to be caused by Gram-positive microorganisms. NeoVanc was an open-label, multicentre, phase 2b, parallel-group, randomised, non-inferiority trial comparing the efficacy and toxicity of an optimised regimen of vancomycin to a standard regimen in infants aged 90 days or younger. Infants with at least three clinical or laboratory sepsis criteria or confirmed Gram-positive sepsis with at least one clinical or laboratory criterion were enrolled from 22 neonatal intensive care units in Greece, Italy, Estonia, Spain, and the UK. Infants were randomly assigned (1:1) to either the optimised regimen (25 mg/kg loading dose, followed by 15 mg/kg every 12 h or 8 h dependent on postmenstrual age, for 5 ± 1 days) or the standard regimen (no loading dose; 15 mg/kg every 24 h, 12 h, or 8 h dependent on postmenstrual age for 10 ± 2 days). Vancomycin was administered intravenously via 60 min infusion. Group allocation was not masked to local investigators or parents. The primary endpoint was success at the test of cure visit (10 ± 1 days after the end of actual vancomycin therapy) in the per-protocol population, where success was defined as the participant being alive at the test of cure visit, having a successful outcome at the end of actual vancomycin therapy, and not having a clinically or microbiologically significant relapse or new infection requiring antistaphylococcal antibiotics for more than 24 h within 10 days of the end of actual vancomycin therapy. The non-inferiority margin was −10%. Safety was assessed in the intention-to-treat population. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02790996). Between March 3, 2017, and July 29, 2019, 242 infants were randomly assigned to the standard regimen group (n=122) or the optimised regimen group (n=120). Primary outcome data in the per-protocol population were available for 90 infants in the optimised group and 92 in the standard group. 64 (71%) of 90 infants in the optimised group and 73 (79%) of 92 in the standard group had success at test of cure visit; non-inferiority was not confirmed (adjusted risk di
ISSN:2352-4642
2352-4650
DOI:10.1016/S2352-4642(21)00305-9