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Comparison of Efficacy and Safety of Ceftazidime Avibactam Versus Extended Infusions of High Dose Meropenem in Patients of ACLF With Nosocomial Infections.

Comparison of Efficacy and Safety of Ceftazidime Avibactam Versus Extended Infusions of High Dose Meropenem in Patients of ACLF With Nosocomial Infections.

Status
Not yet recruiting
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT06818565
Enrollment
150
Registered
2025-02-10
Start date
2025-02-10
Completion date
2026-12-31
Last updated
2025-02-10

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Acute-On-Chronic Liver Failure

Brief summary

Acute on chronic liver failure patients are at high risk for nosocomial infections due to liver dysfunction, which impairs immune responses and increases vulnerability to infections. Key factors contributing to nosocomial infections in ACLF patients include ascites, use of invasive devices, and recent hospitalization, frequent need for broad spectrum antibiotics. Multidrug resistance is a growing issue, making treatment more challenging, common pathogens involved are gram negative bacteria such as Escherichia Coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae. Surveillance data show increasing carbapenem resistant enterobacterales (CRE) infection rates in cirrhotics, with high morbidity and mortality rates. The impact of these nosocomial infections is profound, significantly worsen outcomes in ACLF patients, leading to prolonged hospitalizations, increased health care costs and higher mortality rates. Early detection and effective antibiotic stewardship are essential to manage antibiotic resistance and improve patient outcomes. In this study we aim to compare efficacy and safety of Ceftazidime avibactam versus extended infusions of high dose Meropenem in patients of ACLF with nosocomial infections.

Detailed description

Hypothesis - We hypothesize that ceftazidime-avibactum would be superior and an effective carbapenem sparing agent compared to extended high dose carbapenems as empirical therapy in management of nosocomial infections caused by carbapenem resistant organisms in patients with ACLF. Aim -To compare the efficacy and safety of Ceftazidime avibactam and extended infusions of high dose Meropenem as emperical antibiotic in patients of ACLF with nosocomial infections caused by carbapenem resistant organisms. Primary objective: • To compare the efficacy of Ceftazidime avibactam over extended infusions of high dose carabapenem as emperical antibiotic in achieving clinical response at day 3 in patients of ACLF with suspected nosocomial infections. Secondary objectives: * To study the spectrum of nosocomial infections, bacterial DNA and resistance genes in the context of nosocomial infections in ACLF * Proportion of patients requiring escalation/de-escalation of antibiotics at day 3 * Incidence of clinical and microbiologic response at day 5 and day 7 * Time to escalation of antibiotics in both groups * Transfer to icu, mortality, and progression of organ failures and worsening of AARC scores by grade I, SOFA score by point 2. * Microbiologic outcome (Eradication/Persistence) * To identify biomarkers of host response to empirical antibiotic regimen * Transplant free survival at day 15 and day 28 * Proportion of patients made eligible for transplant day 7. A prospective, Randomized Control Trial. Single centre, Open label, Block randomization will be done, it will be implemented by IWRS method. This study will be conducted in Department of Hepatology, ILBS.

Interventions

Meropenem 2 gm iv TDS

Ceftazidime-avibactam 2.5 gm iv TDS

DRUGTeicoplanin

Teicoplanin 400 mg iv BD 3 doses followed by 400mg iv OD

Sponsors

Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences, India
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Age ≥ 18 years 2. ACLF as per APASL criteria 3. ACLF patients with nosocomial infections caused by carbapenem resistant organism (defined as suspected or documented evidence of infection after 48 hours of hospitalization) requiring antibiotics.

Exclusion criteria

1. Severe septic shock with MOF requiring escalation of antibiotics 2. Patients having known allergies to meropenem or Ceftazidime Avibactam 3. Culture sensitivity showing isolate non susceptible to study drug being investigated. 4. Already on either regimen, receiving meropenem or Ceftazidime Avibactam \>48 hours. 5. On mechanical ventilator support PF ratio \< 300. 6. Patients on immunosuppression medication 7. HCC or other malignancies 8. CKD 9. CAD 10. Pregnancy or Lactation 11. Post Liver Transplantation 12. Refusal to consent 13. PLWHA

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Proportion of ACLF patients with nosocomial infection by carbapenem resistant organisms showing clinical response at the end of treatment.Day 3

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Time to escalation or descalation of antibioticswithin 3 days
Progression in terms of organ dysfunction/failure at day 5 and 7.day 5 and 7
Incidence of adverse events in both groups.within 7 to 10 days
Duration of hospital and ICU stayday 28
Mortality at day 15 and day 28day 15 & 28

Countries

India

Contacts

Primary ContactDr Amanjot Kaur, MD
amanjotbahri@gmail.com01146300000
Backup ContactProf. Rakhi Maiwall, DM
rakhi_2011@yahoo.co.in01146300000

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026