Recent CTTI Publication Investigates HABP/VABP Risk and Antibiotic Trial Eligibility for Hospitalized Patients in Europe

Topics Included: Safety

A new CTTI publication investigates the prospective identification of hospital-acquired and ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia (HABP/VABP) risk factors and antibiotic trial eligibility among hospitalized, critically ill patients at seven European hospitals. The study, PROPHETIC EU: Prospective Identification of Pneumonia in Hospitalized Patients in the Intensive Care Unit in European and United States Cohorts, published in Open Forum Infectious Diseases, evaluated 888 critically ill patients receiving ventilation or high levels of supportive oxygen and used existing clinical criteria to predict which patients would develop HABP/VABP. The researchers compared these results to those of a prior CTTI study of U.S. patients, finding that a higher proportion of European patients who were treated for possible HABP/VABP met the pneumonia definition compared to their counterparts in U.S. hospitals. The European patients were also more likely to meet common antibiotic trial eligibility criteria. The results could be applied to the development of new strategies to improve registrational trial feasibility and foster the development of much needed new antibacterial treatments for HABP/VABP. 

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CTTI Paper Highlights Clinical Criteria that Can Help Identify Patients at High Risk of HABP/VABP

Although treatment of possible nosocomial pneumonia is common with patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) receiving respiratory support, more than half of those treated do not fit the standard clinical definitions of hospital-acquired and ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia (HABP/VABP). A new CTTI paper available online in CHEST® Journal, accompanied by an insightful editorial, “Heeding the Prophetic Call,” outlines how the use of simple clinical criteria may help to identify high-risk patients earlier and aid future research to improve prevention and treatment.

 

The paper highlights the Prospective Identification of Pneumonia in Hospitalized Patients in the ICU (PROPHETIC) study, a large, contemporary, prospective cohort clinical trial designed by CTTI that made several key observations.

 

“HABP/VABP is associated with high mortality and morbidity and may be caused by multidrug-resistant pathogens,” said John Farley, director of the Office of Infectious Diseases at the FDA.   “Conducting clinical trials in HABP/VABP is challenging, and data to understand the patient population is critical to improve trial feasibility.”

The study sought to define the incidence of HABP/VABP in an ICU population and identify characteristics associated with the development of HABP/VABP to inform the design and conduct of future clinical trials.

The study determined that 32 percent of 4,613 prospectively identified high-risk patients received antibiotics for possible HABP/VABP. It was also determined that only 12 percent of the aforementioned high-risk patients fit the FDA Guidance standard clinical definition of HABP/VABP.

“These findings indicate that the burden of HABP and VABP is significant and there is also some concern about antibiotic overprescription in this high-risk population,” said Vance Fowler, professor of medicine at Duke University. “Receiving antibiotics is itself a risk factor for developing pneumonia, carries risks of adverse events, and may preclude eligibility for HABP/VABP clinical trial enrollment.”

Additionally, the manuscript highlights the common characteristics and treatment exposures researchers identified that were associated with increased odds of developing HABP/VABP in high-risk patients.

“Application of the study results to prospectively identify patients at highest risk for HABP/VABP may help to facilitate the conduct of innovative and efficient clinical trials,” said Pamela Tenaerts, executive director of CTTI. “This will help to promote development of optimal preventive, diagnostic, and treatment strategies to improve management of this disease.”

Learn more about CTTI’s work on HABP/VABP Studies.

New CTTI Publication Highlights Stakeholder Preferences for Informed Consent Language in HABP/VABP Studies

A peer-reviewed article recently published in JAMA Network Open details CTTI work to get stakeholder feedback on informed consent language for hospital-acquired and/or ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia (HABP/VABP) studies. The article describes the process of gathering feedback from 52 stakeholders to identify the most important elements to include in the informed consent process.

Previous CTTI research suggested that an early enrollment strategy using advance consent in pneumonia antibiotic trials is acceptable to key stakeholders. As part of that research, CTTI also engaged these stakeholders to identify, describe, and reach consensus on essential concepts that should be included in an advance consent form for a HABP/VABP clinical trial. Concepts were:

  • Reassurances on patient health and treatment
  • Reasons for advance consent and enrolling early
  • Explanation of non-inferiority

The proposed consent language developed in this process, in combination with a strategy for enrolling patients at highest risk for pneumonia before infection onset, may help potential participants make informed decisions about their involvement in clinical research. It may also improve enrollment rates in trials from which data are urgently needed to evaluate new treatments and improve patient care.

Learn more about past CTTI work on HABP/VABP.

Antibacterial Drug Development HABP/VABP Studies

Date Initiated/Completed: 10/04/2024

Topics Included: Ensuring Quality, Recruitment, Regulatory Submissions + Approvals

Program: Antibacterial Drug Development

Related Projects: Antibacterial Drug Development Peds Trials, Antibacterial Drug Development Streamlining HABP/VABP Trials, Antibacterial Drug Development Unmet Need

Clinical trials of new antibacterial drugs for hospital-acquired and ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia (HABP/VABP) are critically needed but challenging to conduct.  

Building on our streamlining HABP/VABP trials work, CTTI conducted a prospective, multi-center, observational study of the risk factors for HABP/VABP, with over 6,700 adult patients enrolled at 28 U.S. sites and seven European sites, and 800 pediatric patients enrolled at nine U.S. children’s hospitals. 

The study, an analysis of cost drivers and formative research on an early consent approach, are informing resources to help you develop and streamline HABP/VABP clinical trial planning.  For example, patients at high risk for developing pneumonia could be approached and consented early, potentially before pneumonia symptoms develop so that fewer patients are excluded because they have already received 24 hours of effective antibacterial therapy. 

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Safety | CTTI News

Recent CTTI Publication Investigates HABP/VABP Risk and Antibiotic Trial Eligibility for Hospitalized Patients in Europe

A new CTTI publication investigates the prospective identification of hospital-acquired and ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia (HABP/VABP) risk factors and antibiotic trial eligibility among hospitalized, critically ill patients at seven European hospitals.

Publications

PROPHETIC EU: Prospective Identification of Pneumonia in Hospitalized Patients in the Intensive Care Unit in European and United States Cohorts

PROPHETIC EU: Prospective Identification of Pneumonia in Hospitalized Patients in the Intensive Care Unit in European and United States Cohorts

Regulatory Submissions + Approvals | CTTI News

CTTI Paper Highlights Clinical Criteria that Can Help Identify Patients at High Risk of HABP/VABP

Although treatment of possible nosocomial pneumonia is common with patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) receiving respiratory support, more than half of those treated do not fit the standard...

Publications

Prospective Identification of Pneumonia in Hospitalized Patients in the ICU

Prospective Identification of Pneumonia in Hospitalized Patients in the ICU

Safety | CTTI News

New CTTI Publication Highlights Stakeholder Preferences for Informed Consent Language in HABP/VABP Studies

A peer-reviewed article recently published in JAMA Network Open details CTTI work to get stakeholder feedback on informed consent language for hospital-acquired and/or ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia (HABP/VABP) studies. The article describes the process of...

Publications

Consensus on Language for Advance Informed Consent in Health Care–Associated Pneumonia Clinical Trials Using a Delphi Process

Consensus on Language for Advance Informed Consent in Health Care–Associated Pneumonia Clinical Trials Using a Delphi Process

Regulatory Submissions + Approvals

Antibacterial Drug Development HABP/VABP Studies

Clinical trials of new antibacterial drugs for hospital-acquired and ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia (HABP/VABP) are critically needed but challenging to conduct.

Publications

Hospital-acquired Pneumonia and Ventilator-associated Pneumonia in Children: A Prospective Natural History and Case-Control Study

Hospital-acquired Pneumonia and Ventilator-associated Pneumonia in Children: A Prospective Natural History and Case-Control Study

Regulatory Submissions + Approvals | CTTI News

CTTI Article Finds that Patients and IRBs are Amenable to Early Enrollment Strategy

A CTTI article recently published in JAMA Network Open shows that an early enrollment strategy for research on healthcare-associated pneumonia is acceptable to patients, investigators, and institutional review boards (IRBs). This...

Publications

Assessment of the Perceived Acceptability of an Early Enrollment Strategy Using Advance Consent in Health Care–Associated Pneumonia

Assessment of the Perceived Acceptability of an Early Enrollment Strategy Using Advance Consent in Health Care–Associated Pneumonia

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CTTI Article Finds that Patients and IRBs are Amenable to Early Enrollment Strategy

A CTTI article recently published in JAMA Network Open shows that an early enrollment strategy for research on healthcare-associated pneumonia is acceptable to patients, investigators, and institutional review boards (IRBs). This strategy has the potential to speed enrollment in trials for critical new antibiotic therapies by allowing patients to be approached and consented to before being diagnosed with pneumonia.

Through its ABDD HABP/VABP Studies work, CTTI conducted qualitative interviews with 52 stakeholders—including patients at risk for pneumonia, caregivers, study investigators and coordinators, and IRB representatives—as part of formative research to assess the acceptability of the approach.

The study found that patients and caregivers had no concerns about patients being approached early and having their records monitored before they developed pneumonia. They believed that patients would be able to understand consent information before diagnosis, and shared their preferences for opt-out procedures.

IRB representatives were also supportive of an early enrollment strategy, and investigators and study coordinators indicated that the approach would not be burdensome.