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Management of Pleural Space Infections

Primary Purpose

Empyema, Pleural, Parapneumonic Effusion

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Locations
United States
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Intrapleural Medications
Surgery
Pleural Sampling
Pleural fluid drainage
Protocol Image #1
Surgical Consultation
Protocol Image #2: Chest X-ray PA/Lateral
Quality of Life
Sponsored by
Swedish Medical Center
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional treatment trial for Empyema, Pleural

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesAccepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Age >18 years
  • Clinical presentation compatible with pleural infection (fever or leukocytosis, elevated procalcitonin, elevated C-reactive protein (CRP))
  • Pleural fluid requiring drainage that is either:

    • Macroscopically purulent or
    • Positive on culture for bacterial infection or
    • Positive for bacteria on gram stain or
    • Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) > 1000 IU/L or
    • Glucose <40 mg/dL

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Age <18 years
  • Unable to give consent (No surrogate consent of legally authorized representatives allowed for this study)
  • Not proficient in English
  • History of prior ipsilateral empyema
  • Has known sensitivity to DNase or alteplase
  • History of intracranial hemorrhage or acute intracranial hemorrhage
  • History of stroke, hemorrhage, or trauma within the last 3 months
  • Has had prior surgery on the side of the pleural infection
  • Patients who are pregnant or lactating
  • Expected survival less than 6 months from a different pathology to this pleural infection based on clinical judgment
  • Has a tunneled pleural catheter in place
  • Patients on anticoagulation that cannot be interrupted for surgical intervention
  • Patients with known or suspected malignant pleural effusion
  • Patients with renal failure (Creatinine clearance <30)
  • Prior history of or concern for chylothorax or pseudochylothorax
  • Vulnerable populations: prisoners

Sites / Locations

  • Swedish Cancer Institute

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

Active Comparator

Active Comparator

Arm Label

Intrapleural fibrinolytic therapy (IPFT)

Surgery

Arm Description

Procedure/Surgery: Pleural Sampling Procedure/Surgery: Pleural fluid drainage Protocol Image #1: After chest tube is placed, imaging is obtained within 24-48 hours to assess the fluid drainage. Other: Surgical Consultation Intrapleural Medications (IPFT): The IPFT group will receive a total of 5-6 doses of alteplase 10mg and DNase 5 mg twice daily x 3 days. delivered through a chest tube or small bore catheter into the pleural space. The doses will be given twice a day. Protocol Image #2: Chest X-ray PA/Lateral: The morning after intervention completion, a chest X-ray PA/lateral will be obtained Quality of Life: Quality of life will be measured at 30 day and 90 day and 1 year clinical follow-up using the SF-36 quality of life survey and return to work questionnaires

Procedure/Surgery: Pleural Sampling Procedure/Surgery: Pleural fluid drainage: Chest tube placement Protocol Image #1: Once the chest tube is placed, imaging is obtained within 24-48 hours to assess the fluid drainage. Other: Surgical Consultation Surgery: The surgical arm will have either open surgery or a VATS approach at the discretion of the surgeon Protocol Image #2: Chest X-ray PA/Lateral: The morning after intervention completion (surgery or last dose of IPFT), a chest X-ray PA/lateral will be obtained Quality of Life: Quality of life will be measured at 30 day and 90 day and 1 year clinical follow-up using the SF-36 quality of life survey and return to work questionnaires

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Feasibility of the proposed study algorithm as measured by percent of subjects enrolled to study completion, percent of subjects randomized but did not complete the study, and percent of health care professional protocol deviation
• Test the feasibility of the proposed study algorithm to compare Intrapleural fibrinolytic therapy (IPFT) to surgical intervention as measured by percent enrollment to completion of study algorithm and multidisciplinary participation in adherence to the algorithm.
Subject identification and accrual as measured by the percent of patients not screened and randomized and the time to accrual of 20 patients of the number of patients accrued in one year
Subject identification and accrual as measured by the percent of patients not screened and randomized and the time to accrual of 20 patients of the number of patients accrued in one year

Secondary Outcome Measures

Radiographic improvement
Imaging will be posterior-anterior (PA) and lateral chest x-ray to determine radiographic change. Images will be saved and exported as JPEG files and opened in image editing software. Polygons will be drawn representing fluid collections and the hemithorax area covered will be calculated with the volume derived. Change in fluid volume will be quantified as: Less than 50% Between 50-75% Greater than 75% Change of greater than 75% will be considered satisfactory improvement. Chest radiograph images will be reviewed and measured by two independent radiologists. If greater than 5% discrepancy in fluid volume change is reported, the independent radiologists will re-read and re-measure the images together.
Number of participants who have treatment failures needing further treatment crossover (IPFT to surgery; surgery to IPFT)
Treatment failures are defined as any patients with evidence of ongoing infection, persistently undrained pleural space and fever or elevated inflammatory markers still present at least 48 hours after completion of their intervention. Treatment failures will be treated at the discretion of the clinically responsible team, this may include but is not limited to study arm crossover. If a patient is a treatment failure and has treatment crossover (IPFT to surgery, surgery to IPFT), the data will documented with the data collection.
Number of participants with procedure related complications
Documented using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE)
Quality of life Surveys: 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36)
Quality of life will be measured at 30 day and 90 day clinical follow-up using the SF-36 quality of life survey. The SF-36 is a 36 question survey that assesses survey general health on a scale of 1-5 (1=excellent, 5=poor). In addition it assesses how current health limits activities such as walking, daily activities of bathing and dressing oneself. A higher score defines a more favorable health state. Each item is score on a 0 to 100 range so that the lowest and highest possible scores are 0 and 100, respectively. Secondarily, the scores to each question are averaged in the groups in which they are categorized to create an 8 scale scores. The 8 scale categories are: physical functioning, role limitations due to physical health, role limitations due to emotional problems, energy/fatigue, emotional well-being, social functioning, pain, and general health.
Cost comparison
Cost Comparison: As one of the secondary endpoints for the study, we will perform a cost comparison between the two study arms (IPFT and surgical drainage). Cost data will be obtained from billing data from the patient's hospital admission for stay and procedures related to the patients complicated pleural space infection. No billing data will be obtained directly from the participants in the study.
Chest tube duration
The length of time the chest tube is in the patient. The study algorithm governs chest tube removal parameters: Once it has been deemed that there is satisfactory improvement in imaging and no signs of ongoing infection, the chest tube will be removed per protocol. Criteria for removal: Fluid non purulent, serous in character, pleural drain output is less than 200 cc/24 hours

Full Information

First Posted
October 2, 2018
Last Updated
November 17, 2022
Sponsor
Swedish Medical Center
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03873766
Brief Title
Management of Pleural Space Infections
Official Title
Management of Pleural Space Infections
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
November 2022
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
April 1, 2019 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
March 11, 2022 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
March 11, 2022 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Sponsor
Name of the Sponsor
Swedish Medical Center

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
Yes
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
Yes

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
Currently, there is no high-quality evidence comparing the clinical outcomes and cost effectiveness of surgical drainage combined with antibiotics versus dual-agent intrapleural fibrinolytic therapy (IPFT) catheter drainage of pleural space infections with concomitant antibiotic therapy. The absence of comparative data is a challenge for surgical and medical services in clinical decision-making for this common and morbid condition. This is a pilot study comparing surgical drainage of the pleural space in complex pleural effusions to bedside chest tube drainage using dual agent IPFT with the intent to inform on study algorithm and endpoint performance in anticipation of a multi-institutional randomized clinical trial.
Detailed Description
Currently, there is no high-quality evidence comparing the clinical outcomes and cost effectiveness of surgical drainage combined with antibiotics versus dual-agent intrapleural fibrinolytic therapy (IPFT) catheter drainage of pleural space infections with concomitant antibiotic therapy. The absence of comparative data is a challenge for surgical and medical services in clinical decision-making for this common and morbid condition. This is a pilot study comparing surgical drainage of the pleural space in complex pleural effusions to bedside chest tube drainage using dual agent IPFT with the intent to inform on study algorithm and endpoint performance in anticipation of a multi-institutional randomized clinical trial. Patient's with complex pleural space infections identified at the institution that meet inclusion criteria will be randomized to receive either IPFT or surgical debridement after a surgery consultation is obtained. Patients randomized to the IPFT study arm will receive a total of 5-6 doses of alteplase 10mg and DNase 5 mg BID x 3 days delivered through a chest tube or small bore catheter into the pleural space. The doses will be given twice a day. If the first IPFT dose is given in the evening on the first day, they will only receive a total of 5 doses of the dual-agent IPFT (alteplase and DNase). The surgical arm will have either open surgery of a VATS approach at the discretion of the surgeon. IPFT (alteplase and DNase) is not an investigational agent. It is used in standard of care practice for the treatment of complex pleural space infections. The investigators seek to compare dual-agent IPFT (alteplase and DNase) to surgery in this study. As such, the IPFT agents will be ordered from pharmacy through the electronic medical record (EMR) as in normal practice and there is not a study drug. After drainage, patients will be followed with protocol images to assess the drainage of their pleural space. If there is satisfactory improvement in the pleural fluid collection on imaging chest tube or small bore catheter will be removed per protocol in both study arms. Chest tube removal protocol is based on fluid character and measured output.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Empyema, Pleural, Parapneumonic Effusion

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Treatment
Study Phase
Phase 4
Interventional Study Model
Parallel Assignment
Model Description
Patients will be randomized to either IPFT or surgery for treatment of their complex pleural space infection
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
26 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Intrapleural fibrinolytic therapy (IPFT)
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Procedure/Surgery: Pleural Sampling Procedure/Surgery: Pleural fluid drainage Protocol Image #1: After chest tube is placed, imaging is obtained within 24-48 hours to assess the fluid drainage. Other: Surgical Consultation Intrapleural Medications (IPFT): The IPFT group will receive a total of 5-6 doses of alteplase 10mg and DNase 5 mg twice daily x 3 days. delivered through a chest tube or small bore catheter into the pleural space. The doses will be given twice a day. Protocol Image #2: Chest X-ray PA/Lateral: The morning after intervention completion, a chest X-ray PA/lateral will be obtained Quality of Life: Quality of life will be measured at 30 day and 90 day and 1 year clinical follow-up using the SF-36 quality of life survey and return to work questionnaires
Arm Title
Surgery
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Procedure/Surgery: Pleural Sampling Procedure/Surgery: Pleural fluid drainage: Chest tube placement Protocol Image #1: Once the chest tube is placed, imaging is obtained within 24-48 hours to assess the fluid drainage. Other: Surgical Consultation Surgery: The surgical arm will have either open surgery or a VATS approach at the discretion of the surgeon Protocol Image #2: Chest X-ray PA/Lateral: The morning after intervention completion (surgery or last dose of IPFT), a chest X-ray PA/lateral will be obtained Quality of Life: Quality of life will be measured at 30 day and 90 day and 1 year clinical follow-up using the SF-36 quality of life survey and return to work questionnaires
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
Intrapleural Medications
Other Intervention Name(s)
IPFT
Intervention Description
The IPFT group will receive a total of 5-6 doses of alteplase 10mg and DNase 5 mg twice daily x 3 days. delivered through a chest tube or small bore catheter into the pleural space. The doses will be given twice a day. If the first IPFT dose is given in the evening on the first day, they will only receive a total of 5 doses of the dual-agent IPFT (alteplase and DNase).
Intervention Type
Procedure
Intervention Name(s)
Surgery
Intervention Description
The surgical arm will have either open surgery or a Video assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery (VATS) approach at the discretion of the surgeon
Intervention Type
Procedure
Intervention Name(s)
Pleural Sampling
Intervention Description
Pleural fluid may be sampled by the responsible clinical service in the course of clinical care for patients with suspected pulmonary infection or by consulting service after identification of patient. Some patients will have a thoracentesis or tube drainage, and others will have no intervention at the time of referral for study eligibility review. Enrollment reflects real world clinical care and patients will be considered for enrollment regardless of sampling techniques or timing prior to evaluation
Intervention Type
Procedure
Intervention Name(s)
Pleural fluid drainage
Intervention Description
All patients in the study must have tube thoracostomy for drainage of the pleural space. This may have been done by the clinically responsible team or by the study team. Physicians may select chest tubes of any type, but the minimum size is 14 French. For patency, chest tubes 14-20 French should be kept at negative 20 suction and flushed daily. Large bore chest tubes (>20French) may be kept at negative 20 suction at the discretion of the physician managing the chest tube and do not require daily flushing. Supportive care will follow Institutional Guidelines.
Intervention Type
Radiation
Intervention Name(s)
Protocol Image #1
Intervention Description
Once the chest tube is placed, imaging is obtained within 24-48 hours to assess the fluid drainage. The choice of image, either Chest X-ray or CT Chest, is up to the discretion of the treating physician. Based on the imaging, patients will be separated into 2 groups: A: Complete drainage/re-expansion of the lung: If there is complete drainage of the pleural fluid collection and lung re-expansion based on image #1, patients will follow usual clinical care without randomization and be observed until discharge. Patients will remain in the study and their data will be collected. B: Incomplete drainage/incomplete lung re-expansion: For those patients that have incomplete drainage of the pleural fluid collection on image #1 and/or the lung does not re-expand.
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
Surgical Consultation
Intervention Description
A thoracic surgery consultation will be obtained on all patients with incomplete drainage and/or the lung does not re-expand, to determine surgical candidacy. Those patients that the surgical team deem unsafe for surgery will receive clinically appropriate guideline centered, non-surgical, care. These patients will not be randomized but they will remain in the study and their data will be collected. Criteria deeming patients unfit for surgery include, but are not limited to: inability to tolerate single lung ventilation, severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and risk of surgery prohibitive. Patients not excluded from surgery will be randomized.
Intervention Type
Radiation
Intervention Name(s)
Protocol Image #2: Chest X-ray PA/Lateral
Intervention Description
The morning after intervention completion (surgery or last dose of IPFT), a chest X-ray PA/lateral will be obtained (protocol image #2). Based on Image #2 the patient will be categorized into one of three groups: satisfactory improvement of pleural fluid collection, unsatisfactory improvement in pleural fluid collection on imaging, or treatment failures.
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
Quality of Life
Intervention Description
Quality of life will be measured at 30 day and 90 day and 1 year clinical follow-up using the SF-36 quality of life survey and return to work questionnaires
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Feasibility of the proposed study algorithm as measured by percent of subjects enrolled to study completion, percent of subjects randomized but did not complete the study, and percent of health care professional protocol deviation
Description
• Test the feasibility of the proposed study algorithm to compare Intrapleural fibrinolytic therapy (IPFT) to surgical intervention as measured by percent enrollment to completion of study algorithm and multidisciplinary participation in adherence to the algorithm.
Time Frame
From patient identification to 1 year post discharge
Title
Subject identification and accrual as measured by the percent of patients not screened and randomized and the time to accrual of 20 patients of the number of patients accrued in one year
Description
Subject identification and accrual as measured by the percent of patients not screened and randomized and the time to accrual of 20 patients of the number of patients accrued in one year
Time Frame
From patient identification to 1 year post discharge
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Radiographic improvement
Description
Imaging will be posterior-anterior (PA) and lateral chest x-ray to determine radiographic change. Images will be saved and exported as JPEG files and opened in image editing software. Polygons will be drawn representing fluid collections and the hemithorax area covered will be calculated with the volume derived. Change in fluid volume will be quantified as: Less than 50% Between 50-75% Greater than 75% Change of greater than 75% will be considered satisfactory improvement. Chest radiograph images will be reviewed and measured by two independent radiologists. If greater than 5% discrepancy in fluid volume change is reported, the independent radiologists will re-read and re-measure the images together.
Time Frame
From date of protocol Image #1 (once the chest tube is placed, protocol image #1 is obtained within 24-48 hours) to date of protocol Image #2 (the morning after intervention, approximately 12-24 hours after intervention)
Title
Number of participants who have treatment failures needing further treatment crossover (IPFT to surgery; surgery to IPFT)
Description
Treatment failures are defined as any patients with evidence of ongoing infection, persistently undrained pleural space and fever or elevated inflammatory markers still present at least 48 hours after completion of their intervention. Treatment failures will be treated at the discretion of the clinically responsible team, this may include but is not limited to study arm crossover. If a patient is a treatment failure and has treatment crossover (IPFT to surgery, surgery to IPFT), the data will documented with the data collection.
Time Frame
From patient identification to 1 year post discharge
Title
Number of participants with procedure related complications
Description
Documented using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE)
Time Frame
From intervention with IPFT or surgery to date of discharge from hospital, usually 7-10 days
Title
Quality of life Surveys: 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36)
Description
Quality of life will be measured at 30 day and 90 day clinical follow-up using the SF-36 quality of life survey. The SF-36 is a 36 question survey that assesses survey general health on a scale of 1-5 (1=excellent, 5=poor). In addition it assesses how current health limits activities such as walking, daily activities of bathing and dressing oneself. A higher score defines a more favorable health state. Each item is score on a 0 to 100 range so that the lowest and highest possible scores are 0 and 100, respectively. Secondarily, the scores to each question are averaged in the groups in which they are categorized to create an 8 scale scores. The 8 scale categories are: physical functioning, role limitations due to physical health, role limitations due to emotional problems, energy/fatigue, emotional well-being, social functioning, pain, and general health.
Time Frame
Quality of life will be measured at 30 day and 90 day clinical follow-up
Title
Cost comparison
Description
Cost Comparison: As one of the secondary endpoints for the study, we will perform a cost comparison between the two study arms (IPFT and surgical drainage). Cost data will be obtained from billing data from the patient's hospital admission for stay and procedures related to the patients complicated pleural space infection. No billing data will be obtained directly from the participants in the study.
Time Frame
From date of intervention with IPFT or surgery to date of discharge from hospital, usually 7-10 days
Title
Chest tube duration
Description
The length of time the chest tube is in the patient. The study algorithm governs chest tube removal parameters: Once it has been deemed that there is satisfactory improvement in imaging and no signs of ongoing infection, the chest tube will be removed per protocol. Criteria for removal: Fluid non purulent, serous in character, pleural drain output is less than 200 cc/24 hours
Time Frame
From date of initiation of intervention of IPFT or surgery (approximately 24-48 hours after patient identification) to date of removal of chest tube, approximately 7 days after placement depending on the intervention and the chest tube output.

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
18 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Age >18 years Clinical presentation compatible with pleural infection (fever or leukocytosis, elevated procalcitonin, elevated C-reactive protein (CRP)) Pleural fluid requiring drainage that is either: Macroscopically purulent or Positive on culture for bacterial infection or Positive for bacteria on gram stain or Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) > 1000 IU/L or Glucose <40 mg/dL Exclusion Criteria: Age <18 years Unable to give consent (No surrogate consent of legally authorized representatives allowed for this study) Not proficient in English History of prior ipsilateral empyema Has known sensitivity to DNase or alteplase History of intracranial hemorrhage or acute intracranial hemorrhage History of stroke, hemorrhage, or trauma within the last 3 months Has had prior surgery on the side of the pleural infection Patients who are pregnant or lactating Expected survival less than 6 months from a different pathology to this pleural infection based on clinical judgment Has a tunneled pleural catheter in place Patients on anticoagulation that cannot be interrupted for surgical intervention Patients with known or suspected malignant pleural effusion Patients with renal failure (Creatinine clearance <30) Prior history of or concern for chylothorax or pseudochylothorax Vulnerable populations: prisoners
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Jed Gorden, MD
Organizational Affiliation
Swedish Cancer Institute
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Swedish Cancer Institute
City
Seattle
State/Province
Washington
ZIP/Postal Code
98104
Country
United States

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
No

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Management of Pleural Space Infections

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