Cherry-Ann Waldron
Procalcitonin-guided duration of antibiotic treatment in children hospitalised with confirmed or suspected bacterial infection in the UK (BATCH): a pragmatic, multicentre, open-label, two-arm, individually randomised, controlled trial
Waldron, Cherry-Ann; Pallmann, Philip; Schoenbuchner, Simon; Harris, Debbie; Brookes-Howell, Lucy; Mateus, Céu; Bernatoniene, Jolanta; Cathie, Katrina; Faust, Saul N; Hinds, Lucy; Hood, Kerenza; Huang, Chao; Jones, Sarah; Kotecha, Sarah; Nabwera, Helen M; Patel, Sanjay; Paulus, Stéphane C; Powell, Colin V E; Preston, Jenny; Xiang, Huasheng; Thomas-Jones, Emma; Carrol, Enitan D; on behalf of the BATCH Trial Team
Authors
Philip Pallmann
Simon Schoenbuchner
Debbie Harris
Lucy Brookes-Howell
Céu Mateus
Jolanta Bernatoniene
Katrina Cathie
Saul N Faust
Lucy Hinds
Kerenza Hood
Dr Chao Huang C.Huang@hull.ac.uk
Reader in Statistics
Sarah Jones
Sarah Kotecha
Helen M Nabwera
Sanjay Patel
Stéphane C Paulus
Colin V E Powell
Jenny Preston
Huasheng Xiang
Emma Thomas-Jones
Enitan D Carrol
on behalf of the BATCH Trial Team
Abstract
Background
Procalcitonin is a rapid response biomarker specific for bacterial infection, which is not routinely used in the UK National Health Service. We aimed to assess whether using a procalcitonin-guided algorithm would safely reduce the duration of antibiotic therapy compared with usual care, in which C-reactive protein is the commonly used biomarker.
Methods
The BATCH trial was a pragmatic, multicentre, open-label, parallel, two-arm, individually randomised, controlled trial conducted in 15 hospitals in England and Wales. Children aged 72 h to 18 years who were admitted to hospital and were being treated with intravenous antibiotics for suspected or confirmed bacterial infection and who were expected to remain on intravenous antibiotics for more than 48 h were enrolled. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either current clinical management alone (usual care group) or clinical management with the addition of a procalcitonin test guided algorithm (procalcitonin group). Participants were randomly assigned by minimisation, with site and age group (0–6 months, 6 months to 2 years, 2–5 years, and older than 5 years) as minimisation factors and a random element to reduce predictability. Participants were randomly assigned remotely using a secure 24 h web-based randomisation programme. The coprimary outcomes were duration of intravenous antibiotic use, assessed for superiority, and a composite safety measure, assessed for non-inferiority (non-inferiority margin 5%). The primary analysis sample for each coprimary endpoint included all randomly assigned participants with available outcome data. This trial is registered with the International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number registry, ISRCTN11369832.
Findings
Between June 11, 2018, and Oct 12, 2022, 15 282 children were screened for eligibility, 1949 of whom were randomly assigned to receive procalcitonin-guided antibiotic therapy (n=977) or usual care (n=972). The median intravenous antibiotic duration was 96·0 h (IQR 59·5–155·5) in the procalcitonin group and 99·7 h (61·2–153·8) in the usual care group (hazard ratio 0·96 [95% CI 0·87–1·05]). 78 (9%) of 917 participants in the procalcitonin group and 85 (9%) of 904 participants in the usual care group had at least one event covered by the composite safety outcome measure (estimated adjusted risk difference –0·81% [95% CI upper bound 1·11]).
Interpretation
In children with suspected or confirmed bacterial infection admitted to hospitals in England and Wales for intravenous antibiotic treatment of at least 48 h, the introduction of a procalcitonin-guided algorithm did not reduce duration of intravenous antibiotics treatment and is non-inferior to usual care for safety outcomes. Therefore, evidence does not support the use of procalcitonin-guided algorithms where robust effective paediatric antibiotic stewardship programmes are established.
Citation
Waldron, C.-A., Pallmann, P., Schoenbuchner, S., Harris, D., Brookes-Howell, L., Mateus, C., Bernatoniene, J., Cathie, K., Faust, S. N., Hinds, L., Hood, K., Huang, C., Jones, S., Kotecha, S., Nabwera, H. M., Patel, S., Paulus, S. C., Powell, C. V. E., Preston, J., Xiang, H., …on behalf of the BATCH Trial Team. (2025). Procalcitonin-guided duration of antibiotic treatment in children hospitalised with confirmed or suspected bacterial infection in the UK (BATCH): a pragmatic, multicentre, open-label, two-arm, individually randomised, controlled trial. The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, 9(2), 121-130. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2352-4642%2824%2900306-7
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Nov 4, 2024 |
Online Publication Date | Jan 8, 2025 |
Publication Date | Feb 1, 2025 |
Deposit Date | Jan 9, 2025 |
Publicly Available Date | Jan 24, 2025 |
Electronic ISSN | 2352-4642 |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 9 |
Issue | 2 |
Pages | 121-130 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1016/S2352-4642%2824%2900306-7 |
Public URL | https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/5002573 |
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Copyright Statement
Copyright © 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license.
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