Partial Oral Antibiotic Treatment for Bacterial Brain Abscess

Last updated: January 28, 2025
Sponsor: Henrik Nielsen
Overall Status: Active - Recruiting

Phase

4

Condition

Brain Tumor

Soft Tissue Infections

Treatment

Standard treatment of intravenous antibiotics

Early transition to oral antibiotics

Clinical Study ID

NCT04140903
1
  • Ages > 18
  • All Genders

Study Summary

The investigators aim to determine if oral antibiotics are clinically acceptable as treatment of brain abscess. Following 2 weeks of standard intravenous antibiotic therapy, half of patients will continue with this treatment for another 4 weeks or longer while the other half will be assigned to oral antibiotics for the remaining duration of treatment.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. A clinical presentation (e.g. headache, neurological deficit or fever) and cranial imaging (CT or MRI) consistent with brain abscess AND

  2. The physician responsible for the patient decides to treat the patient for bacterial brain abscess AND

  3. Ability to take and absorb oral medications (including by nasogastric tube) AND

  4. To have received relevant antibiotic therapy for bacterial brain abscess for 14 consecutive days before randomisation AND

  5. Expected to be treated with antibiotic therapy for at least another 14 days after time of randomisation AND

  6. No progression in symptom intensity or occurrence of new-onset neurological symptoms (excluding seizures) within five days before time of randomisation.

Exclusion Criteria (patients fulfilling either criteria):

  1. Expected substantially reduced compliance with treatment (e.g. IV drug abuse)

  2. Pregnancy (proven by positive urine or plasma human chorionic gonadotropin test in fertile women <50 years of age)

  3. Concomitant (empirical) brain abscess treatment for tuberculosis, nocardiosis, Pseudomonas spp., fungi, toxoplasmosis or other CNS parasites

  4. Device related brain abscesses (e.g. deep brain stimulators, ventriculo-peritoneal shunts)

  5. Severe immuno-compromise defined as ongoing need for biological- or chemotherapy, prednisolone >20 mg/day for 14 days or longer, uncontrolled HIV/AIDS, haematological malignancies, and organ transplant recipients

  6. Concomitant or unrelated infections necessitating IV antibiotics beyond seven days of duration after time of randomisation

  7. Previous enrolment into this trial

Study Design

Total Participants: 400
Treatment Group(s): 2
Primary Treatment: Standard treatment of intravenous antibiotics
Phase: 4
Study Start date:
November 06, 2020
Estimated Completion Date:
August 31, 2028

Study Description

Treatment of brain abscess remains a considerable challenge due to the precarious location of the infection and the impenetrability of the blood-brain-barrier for most drugs. Thus, cure usually requires a combination of neurosurgical evacuation of abscess material and 6-8 weeks of high-dose intravenous (IV) antibiotic therapy to ensure eradication of bacteria within the abscess cavity. Disadvantages include risks of nosocomial infections and line-associated complications (e.g. bleeding, venous thrombosis, or need for replacement due to malfunction) in addition to the considerable costs of such long-term admission. However, improved insights into the pharmacokinetic properties and favourable bioavailability of some oral antibiotics may allow such treatment at an early stage. To date, there are no randomised controlled trials to guide treatment of bacterial brain abscess.

The investigators wish to determine whether a treatment strategy of transition to oral antibiotics after two weeks of treatment is non-inferior to continued IV antibiotics in clinically stable brain abscess patients assessed by the proportion with a favourable outcome at six months since randomisation.

Connect with a study center

  • Aalborg University Hospital

    Aalborg,
    Denmark

    Active - Recruiting

  • Aarhus University Hospital

    Aarhus,
    Denmark

    Active - Recruiting

  • Rigshospitalet

    Copenhagen,
    Denmark

    Active - Recruiting

  • Odense University Hospital

    Odense,
    Denmark

    Active - Recruiting

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