urc mondor


Unité de Recherche Clinique Henri Mondor

Performance and economic evaluation of the molecular detection of pathogens for patients with severe infections: the EVAMICA open-label, cluster-randomised, interventional crossover trial.

Cambau E, Durand-Zaleski I, Bretagne S, Brun-Buisson C, Cordonnier C, Duval X, Herwegh S, Pottecher J, Courcol R, Bastuji-Garin S Intensive Care Med. 2017;43(11):1613-1625.

<p><b>PURPOSE: </b>Microbiological diagnosis (MD) of infections remains insufficient. The resulting empirical antimicrobial therapy leads to multidrug resistance and inappropriate treatments. We therefore evaluated the cost-effectiveness of direct molecular detection of pathogens in blood for patients with severe sepsis (SES), febrile neutropenia (FN) and suspected infective endocarditis (SIE).</p><p><b>METHODS: </b>Patients were enrolled in a multicentre, open-label, cluster-randomised crossover trial conducted during two consecutive periods, randomly assigned as control period (CP; standard diagnostic workup) or intervention period (IP; additional testing with LightCyclerSeptiFast). Multilevel models used to account for clustering were stratified by clinical setting (SES, FN, SIE).</p><p><b>RESULTS: </b>A total of 1416 patients (907 SES, 440 FN, 69 SIE) were evaluated for the primary endpoint (rate of blood MD). For SES patients, the MD rate was higher during IP than during CP [42.6% (198/465) vs. 28.1% (125/442), odds ratio (OR) 1.89, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.43-2.50; P < 0.001], with an absolute increase of 14.5% (95% CI 8.4-20.7). A trend towards an association was observed for SIE [35.4% (17/48) vs. 9.5% (2/21); OR 6.22 (0.98-39.6)], but not for FN [32.1% (70/218) vs. 30.2% (67/222), P = 0.66]. Overall, turn-around time was shorter during IP than during CP (22.9 vs. 49.5 h, P < 0.001) and hospital costs were similar (median, mean ± SD: IP €14,826, €18,118 ± 17,775; CP €17,828, €18,653 ± 15,966). Bootstrap analysis of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio showed weak dominance of intervention in SES patients.</p><p><b>CONCLUSION: </b>Addition of molecular detection to standard care improves MD and thus efficiency of healthcare resource usage in patients with SES. ClinicalTrials.gov registration number: NCT00709358.</p>

MeSH terms: Aged; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Cost-Benefit Analysis; Cross-Over Studies; Endocarditis; Febrile Neutropenia; Female; Hospital Mortality; Humans; Intensive Care Units; Intention to Treat Analysis; Male; Middle Aged; Molecular Diagnostic Techniques; Quality Improvement; Retrospective Studies; Risk Factors; Sepsis; Time Factors; Time-to-Treatment
DOI: 10.1007/s00134-017-4766-4