Fitzgerald Deirdre B, Waterer Grant W, Read Catherine A, Fysh Edward T, Shrestha Ranjan, Stanley Christopher, Muruganandan Sanjeevan, Lan Norris S H, Popowicz Natalia D, Peddle-McIntyre Carolyn J, Rahman Najib M, Gan Seng Khee, Murray Kevin, Lee Yun Chor Gary
Respiratory Medicine, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital.
Medical School, Faculty of Health & Medical Sciences.
Medicine (Baltimore). 2019 Oct;98(43):e17397. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000017397.
Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a major global disease. Parapneumonic effusions often complicate CAP and range from uninfected (simple) to infected (complicated) parapneumonic effusions and empyema (pus). CAP patients who have a pleural effusion at presentation are more likely to require hospitalization, have a longer length of stay and higher mortality than those without an effusion. Conventional management of pleural infection, with antibiotics and chest tube drainage, fails in about 30% of cases. Several randomized controlled trials (RCT) have evaluated the use of corticosteroids in CAP and demonstrated some potential benefits. Importantly, steroid use in pneumonia has an acceptable safety profile with no adverse impact on mortality. A RCT focused on pediatric patients with pneumonia and a parapneumonic effusion demonstrated shorter time to recovery. The effects of corticosteroid use on clinical outcomes in adults with parapneumonic effusions have not been tested. We hypothesize that parapneumonic effusions develop from an exaggerated pleural inflammatory response. Treatment with systemic steroids may dampen the inflammation and lead to improved clinical outcomes. The steroid therapy and outcome of parapneumonic pleural effusions (STOPPE) trial will assess the efficacy and safety of systemic corticosteroid as an adjunct therapy in adult patients with CAP and pleural effusions.
STOPPE is a pilot multicenter, double-blinded, placebo-controlled RCT that will randomize 80 patients with parapneumonic effusions (2:1) to intravenous dexamethasone or placebo, administered twice daily for 48 hours. This exploratory study will capture a wide range of clinically relevant endpoints which have been used in clinical trials of pneumonia and/or pleural infection; including, but not limited to: time to clinical stability, inflammatory markers, quality of life, length of hospital stay, proportion of patients requiring escalation of care (thoracostomy or thoracoscopy), and mortality. Safety will be assessed by monitoring for the incidence of adverse events during the study.
STOPPE is the first trial to assess the efficacy and safety profile of systemic corticosteroids in adults with CAP and pleural effusions. This will inform future studies on feasibility and appropriate trial endpoints.
ACTRN12618000947202 PROTOCOL VERSION:: version 3.00/26.07.18.
社区获得性肺炎(CAP)是一种主要的全球性疾病。肺炎旁胸腔积液常使CAP病情复杂化,范围从未感染(单纯性)到感染(复杂性)肺炎旁胸腔积液及脓胸(脓液)。就诊时伴有胸腔积液的CAP患者比无胸腔积液的患者更有可能需要住院治疗,住院时间更长且死亡率更高。胸膜感染的传统治疗方法,即使用抗生素和胸腔闭式引流,在约30%的病例中失败。多项随机对照试验(RCT)评估了皮质类固醇在CAP中的应用,并显示出一些潜在益处。重要的是,肺炎中使用类固醇具有可接受的安全性,对死亡率没有不利影响。一项针对患有肺炎和肺炎旁胸腔积液的儿科患者的RCT显示恢复时间更短。皮质类固醇的使用对患有肺炎旁胸腔积液的成人临床结局的影响尚未得到检验。我们假设肺炎旁胸腔积液是由过度的胸膜炎症反应发展而来。全身使用类固醇治疗可能会减轻炎症并改善临床结局。肺炎旁胸腔积液的类固醇治疗与结局(STOPPE)试验将评估全身皮质类固醇作为辅助治疗对患有CAP和胸腔积液的成年患者的疗效和安全性。
STOPPE是一项试点多中心、双盲、安慰剂对照的RCT,将80例肺炎旁胸腔积液患者按2:1随机分为静脉注射地塞米松组或安慰剂组,每日给药两次,共48小时。这项探索性研究将获取一系列在肺炎和/或胸膜感染临床试验中使用的临床相关终点;包括但不限于:临床稳定时间、炎症标志物、生活质量、住院时间、需要升级治疗(胸廓造口术或胸腔镜检查)的患者比例以及死亡率。通过监测研究期间不良事件的发生率来评估安全性。
STOPPE是第一项评估全身皮质类固醇对患有CAP和胸腔积液的成人疗效和安全性的试验。这将为未来关于可行性和适当试验终点的研究提供信息。
ACTRN12618000947202 方案版本:版本3.00/26.07.18