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Antimicrobial Therapy for Difficult-to-treat Pseudomonas Aeruginosa

Antimicrobial Therapy for Difficult-to-treat Pseudomonas Aeruginosa

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

The primary objective of the ADDICT study is to assess and compare the clinical efficacy of available options for antimicrobial therapy (new beta-lactam/beta-lactamase inhibitor combination, cefiderocol or older agents such as aminoglycosides and colistin) in unselected patients with infection due to difficult-to-treat P. aeruginosa.

Description

Infections due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates with acquired resistances to all first-line antipseudomonal beta-lactams and fluoroquinolones (difficult-to-treat isolates - DTR), pose serious therapeutical challenges, especially in critically ill and/or immunocompromised patients. Certain new beta-lactam/beta-lactamase inhibitor combinations (BL/BLI (beta lactamine/ beta lactamase inhibitor) - i.e., ceftolozane-tazobactam, ceftazidime-avibactam, imipenem-relebactam, others) and cefiderocol have shown promising results for the treatment of infections due to DTR P. aeruginosa. However, multicenter data on their real-life utilization in this indication are still scarce.

The ADDICT study is a prospective, multicenter cohort study including unselected patients with DTR P. aeruginosa infection requiring definite intravenous antimicrobial therapy. The primary objective of the study is to investigate the clinical efficacy of available options (new BL/BLI, cefiderocol or older agents such as aminoglycosides and colistin) in this population. Secondary objectives are to compare the clinical and microbiological efficacy of available options in infections due to DTR P. aeruginosa with in vitro susceptibility to more than one last-resort drug, to compare the incidence of non-ecological adverse events observed with these drugs, to assess the incidence of resistance emergence under therapy and to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of resistance emergence, to assess the benefits and risks of combination therapy in this indication, to compare the acquisition rates of multidrug-resistant bacteria other than DTR P. aeruginosa, and Clostridioides difficile infection, to compare Day-28 and in-hospital all-cause mortality rates.

Patients will be recruited in 60 hospital centers contributing to four French networks of research in infectious diseases and critical care (CRICS-TRIGGERSEP, ReaRezo, OutcomeRéa, RENARCI - PROMISE metanetwork). Clinical variables will be collected through an electronic case-report form. DTR P. aeruginosa isolates will be sent to the National Reference Center of Antimicrobial Resistance in P. aeruginosa for centralized analyses (extended antimicrobial susceptibility testing, MLST, whole-genome sequencing of successive isolates if resistance emergence under therapy).

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • All patients aged 18 or over and requiring intravenous definite antimicrobial therapy for a DTR P. aeruginosa infection

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Cystic fibrosis
  • P. aeruginosa DTR colonization or P. aeruginosa DTR infection not requiring definitive intravenous antibiotic therapy
  • Protected person (under guardianship or curatorship)
  • Persons under court protection
  • Persons deprived of liberty
  • Opposition expressed for participation in the study

Study details
    Pseudomonas Infections
    Pseudomonas Aeruginosa
    Prognosis
    Drug Resistance
    Multiple
    Bacterial
    Antibacterial Agents
    Beta-lactam Antibiotics

NCT06738771

Centre Hospitalier Régional d'Orléans

15 October 2025

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