Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
Healthy Volunteers
Type
Interventional
Phase
Phase 1
Design
Allocation: Non-RandomizedIntervention Model: Single Group AssignmentMasking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Device Feasibility

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Outline of the study: This study will take place at the Imperial Clinical Research Facility (ICRF). Twenty healthy volunteers will be recruited to take part in three visits to the ICRF. These will each last 8-12 hours. During these visits participants will receive penicillin via infusion following: ...

Outline of the study: This study will take place at the Imperial Clinical Research Facility (ICRF). Twenty healthy volunteers will be recruited to take part in three visits to the ICRF. These will each last 8-12 hours. During these visits participants will receive penicillin via infusion following: (i) Routine (intermittent or continuous) dosing protocols. (ii) Intermittent dosing directed by a closed-loop control system. (iii) Continuous dosing directed by a closed-loop control system. Participants will have up to 15 blood samples and tissue microdialysis performed. A biosensor will also be used to provide real-time antibiotic concentration data. This will be used to drive the closed-loop control system. Outcome measures will be PK-PD target attainment between visits. This target will be 50% time > MIC and 100% time > MIC. Participant identification: Healthy volunteers will be recruited from a healthy volunteer database held within Imperial College London and via identification of participants within the College. An initial advertisement e-mail will be sent by the Healthy Volunteer Database Administrator and individuals responding will then followed up by telephone or e-mail and invited to attend a screening visit at the ICRF. They will be sent the participant information leaflet via email in advance of this meeting to give them time to consider the information. Study methodology: Twenty healthy volunteers will be invited to participate in an exploratory study of the biosensor device and closed-loop control systems. Allergy status will be confirmed with the participant at each visit. Study days will follow the same format. The only deviation will be the method of penicillin delivery (this will either be by routine infusion, closed-loop intermittent infusion, or closed-loop continuous infusion). On the night before study visits, participants will be asked to refrain from drinking alcohol. On the study day they will be invited to bring a laptop / tablet device for their entertainment. Alternatively, one will be provided on the study day by the ICRF. On arrival at the study center the participant will have a microneedle biosensor sited. They will have two cannulae inserted, ideally one in each arm. One of these will be for taking blood during the study. The other will be for penicillin delivery. They will also have a microdialysis fibre inserted in the same arm as the microneedle array. A baseline blood sample will be taken (full blood count, renal function, liver function, and C-reactive protein) on each visit. The microneedle biosensor will be sited peripherally (on the non-dominant arm). These sensors are connected to potentiostat devices that record data, which can then be downloaded onto a computer for analysis. The study will then commence at time = 0 when the first infusion of penicillin will be given. In total, the study will run for 3 benzylpenicillin dosing intervals (8-12 hours). For intermittent, routine care benzylpenicillin doses will be given at time = 0, 4, and 8 hours. During closed-loop control visits the controller will be allowed to determine the dosing interval / period. The controller will be limited to deliver a MAXIMUM dose equivalent to 2.4g every 4-hours. During the study interval the participant will undergo rich blood and microdialysis drug concentration sampling. For blood sampling, up to 15 beta-lactam drug levels will be taken during the study visit period. Each blood test will involve the collection of 5mLs of blood (1 teaspoon). Microdialysis will be performed continuously for the study period. The collection vial will be changed every 15-30 minutes during the study period. In addition, a blood spot will be used from the blood samples taken as part of the PK sampling to test point-of-care penicillin sensors at the time-points described below. A visual analogue scale will be completed by the participant every hour to evaluate their level of discomfort due to the microneedle sensor device. The device and site will also be checked by researchers every hour. Time points for the blood sampling are planned to initially be taken at pre, 6, 10, 15, 30, 60, 120, 180, 240, 246, 250, 300, 480, 486, 600 minutes. However, following initial PK analysis a D-optimal design will be employed using Pmetrics and BestDose pharmacokinetic software to determine the optimal time points for blood PK analysis.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04053140
Collaborators
Not Provided
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Alison H Holmes, MD MPH MBBS Health Protection Research Unit in HCAI & AMR