Site icon Critical Care Northampton

ADAPT-Sepsis

Advertisements

Multicenter, intervention-concealed, randomized controlled trial (ADAPT-Sepsis) evaluating biomarker-guided protocols using procalcitonin (PCT) or C-reactive protein (CRP) versus standard care to guide antibiotic duration in critically ill adults with suspected sepsis in UK intensive care units (ICUs).

The authors concluded that a PCT-guided protocol, compared to standard care, safely reduced antibiotic duration by approximately 10% in critically ill patients with suspected sepsis, with no significant impact on mortality, supporting its potential to combat antimicrobial resistance.

Detailed gripes below

The trial provides evidence for PCT-guided antibiotic stewardship, but:

In critically ill adults with suspected sepsis, a PCT-guided protocol reduced antibiotic duration by ~10% compared to standard care, with no significant increase in 28-day mortality, though a 1.5% mortality increase raises caution. CRP-guided protocols showed no benefit. While promising for antibiotic stewardship, the trial’s UK-centric design, high exclusion rate, and lack of patient-centered outcomes limit broader application. Larger, diverse trials are needed to confirm PCT’s role and safety.

The ADAPT-Sepsis trial is a robust effort to refine antibiotic stewardship in sepsis, showing PCT-guided protocols can modestly reduce antibiotic duration without clear harm. Its multicenter design and large sample size strengthen its findings, but the UK-only setting, high exclusion rate, and concerning mortality signal in the PCT arm temper enthusiasm. The lack of patient-centered outcomes and long-term data leaves gaps in understanding real-world impact. This study is a valuable step toward precision sepsis care, but it’s not the final word—expect more trials to clarify PCT’s role and explore other biomarkers. Proceed with cautious optimism!

Written by JW

Exit mobile version