June 6, 2023: INSPIRE NIH Collaboratory Trial Principal Investigators Share Update at Annual Steering Committee Meeting

In an interview at the annual NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory Steering Committee meeting in Bethesda, Maryland, Richard Platt, MD, MS (co–principal investigator) and Shruti Gohil, MD, MPH (lead investigator) of the INSPIRE NIH Collaboratory Trial shared the status of the trials, discussed recent lessons learned, described the impact they hope their trials will have on the future of healthcare, and reflected on the impact the NIH Collaboratory has had on their trials thus far.

Status Update

Headshot of Dr. Richard Platt
Richard Platt, MD

Shruti Gohil, MD, MPH

INSPIRE (or Intelligent Stewardship Prompts to Improve Real-Time Empiric Antibiotic Selection for Patients) is implementing 2 separate cluster-randomized trials to study the effectiveness of a patient/infection/hospital-specific clinical decision support program in improving antibiotic prescribing for non–critically ill patients who are hospitalized with abdominal infections or skin and soft tissue infections. The purpose of the trials is to reduce unnecessary broad-spectrum antibiotic use in non–intensive care unit inpatients.

The 12-month trial is currently in month 5, and the team has already seen a downward inflection in broad-spectrum antibiotic use.

Lessons Learned

Due to the urgent public health threat of antibiotic resistance, healthcare systems are actively seeking ways to support clinicians in judicious antibiotic prescribing. As a result, although the target recruitment was 60 hospitals out of approximately 200, 92 hospitals at HCA Healthcare requested enrollment.

"We have the privilege of being with a health system that has a strong leadership structure that is patient-safety oriented, and quality improvement is a top-notch priority," Gohil said, describing the unusual overenrollment.

The INSPIRE team determined that the trial could be shortened from 18 months to 12 by using all 92 hospitals.

"We determined that the higher number of hospitals wanting to participate gave us the opportunity to understand the usefulness of this decision support tool as quickly as possible and honor the commitment of the partner health system," Platt said. "Their view is, if it works, we want to use it everywhere as soon as possible," he said.

Impact of the Trial on Real-World Healthcare

Dr. Gohil explained that she hopes not only to reduce unnecessary prescribing of broad-spectrum antibiotics, but also to learn about how digital health can transform healthcare and its delivery.

“We have a tool that not only flags a low-risk patient, but is doing it based on data from the [electronic medical record] system, and is calculating risk specific to a patient, specific to a disease, and specific to a type of bacteria, and one that is unique to a hospital. It captures all that information and presents it to a clinician to make good judgments about antibiotic selection,” Gohil said. She hopes this work will be a step towards future systems that could be “savvy enough and real-time enough deliver high precision care tailored for individual patients as  part of an embedded learning system.”

Impact of the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory on INSPIRE

The INSPIRE intervention includes a clinical decision support tool to help clinicians make a guideline-concordant decision on antibiotic use based on a patient's personalized risk. At the time of the trial’s launch, the FDA introduced a new guidance on Clinical Decision Support Software to support determinations regarding whether a software would be considered a device and therefore subject to FDA oversight.

“It was really helpful to have the Ethics and Regulatory Core do a deep dive with us on the FDA guidance on clinical decision support and help determine that our software was not considered a device,” Platt said.

The INSPIRE NIH Collaboratory Trial is supported within the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory by a grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).

All of the materials from the 2023 Steering Committee meeting are now available.