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Active clinical trials for "Bacterial Infections"

Results 371-380 of 589

A Natural History Study to Assess the Clinical Outcomes of Patients With Complement Factor I Deficiency-Mediated...

Recurrent Bacterial InfectionAutoimmune Disorder

This study will follow participants with a disease which is associated with an absence or deficiency in Complement Factor I (CFI) as confirmed in the CFI-001 screening study.

Terminated8 enrollment criteria

Efficacy of Vitamin C on AKI Outcomes in Critically Ill Cirrhotics With Multidrug-resistant Bacterial...

Liver Cirrhosis

In this prospective randomized controlled trial we aim to evaluate the impact of vitamin C on AKI outcomes in patients with cirrhosis and MDR infections. We also aim to evaluate the effects of iv vitamin c on systemic hemodynamics (cardiac output and systemic vascular resistive index, extravascular lung water and lung permeability index), endothelial function and coagulation, microcirculation (as assessed by lactate clearance and central venous oxygen saturation), mitochondrial function, 28-day mortality and vasopressor, ventilator and RRT free days in the ICU. The safety and side-effects of vitamin c would also be evaluated. Patients with suspected (nosocomial acquisition) or proven MDR infections would be screened and randomized to two groups who meet the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Group 1: Will receive iv vitamin C (25 mg/kg or max. 1.5 gram every 6 hourly) for maximum 5 days along with iv antibiotics as per institutional protocol Group 2: iv antibiotics alone

Unknown status22 enrollment criteria

Increased Re-eradication Rate of Helicobacter Pylori by Adding N-acetylcystein or Metronidazole...

Bacterial Infection Due to Helicobacter Pylori (H. Pylori)

Compare efficacy and safety of 10-day triple therapy (rabeprazole, clarithromycin and amoxicillin) plus N-acetylcystein versus 10-day concomitant therapy (rabeprazole, clarithromycin, amoxicillin and metronidazole) for re-eradication for gastric Helicobacter pylori infection.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Efficacy and Mortality of a Loading Dose of Colistin in Critical Ill Patients

Gram Negative Bacterial Infections

The study hypothesis is that the loading dose of intravenous colistin (6 million of international units) is associated with greater clinical and microbiological efficacy, and reduced mortality of critically ill patients infected by multidrug resistant Gram- negative bacilli, compared to a scheme without loading dose.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Plasma Concentrations of Amoxicillin Administered in High-doses During the First Week of Treatment...

InfectionBacterial

Amoxicillin is the most prescribed antibiotic in France. High dose intravenous amoxicillin, (dosage greater than or equal to 150 mg / kg / day or 12 g per day for patients over 80 kg) is used in the treatment, in particular, of infectious streptococcal endocarditis. oral, streptococci gallolyticus and enterococci, infections of the central nervous system with sensitive germs including Streptococcus pneumoniae and Listeria monocytogenes, osteo articular infections. The dose-related adverse effects of this antibiotic are nephrological (crystalluria may lead to acute renal failure) and neurologic. Recently, the number of amoxicillin crystalluria reported to pharmacovigilance centers has increased, having led the National Agency of drug and health products safety (ANSM) to recommend the determination of the residual level of amoxicillin during the first week of treatment of these patients. Nevertheless, there is no precise therapeutic target in patients treated with high dose amoxicillin except in the context of critical care. The authors suggest the interest of a target between 4 and 10 times the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) based on in vitro efficacy studies, and retrospective observations of toxicity cases.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

Validation Study of Combined Positron Emission Tomography/Computer Tomography to Diagnose Infection...

Bacterial InfectionsBacteremia2 more

The overall aim is to validate the current use of FDG PET/CT for the diagnosis of infection and inflammation and examine the usefulness of PET/CT applying also other tracers. The results should allow us to confirm our primary hypothesis: "FDG-PET/CT is better than established methods to confirm or exclude the diagnosis of infection/inflammation".

Terminated12 enrollment criteria

Impact of Ceftriaxone and/or Fluoroquinolone (FQ) Treatment on the Gut Microbiota of Hospitalized...

Bacterial Infections

Observational study of the effects of antibiotics on commensal flora. Realization of stool samples and nasal swabs before and after antibiotic therapy.

Terminated15 enrollment criteria

Xydalba Utilization Registry in Germany

Bacterial Infections

This observational study will collect data on the use of the drug Xydalba® in daily clinical practice in Germany. Such observational studies are also referred to as registries. The sponsor of the study is Correvio International Sárl, based in Switzerland. Xydalba® contains the active substance dalbavancin, a remedy for a certain type of bacterial pathogens (so-called "gram positive bacteria") which cause the disease. Active ingredients against bacteria are also called antibiotics. Correvio wants to know which patients received the drug and how the disease went. The treatment places where you got Xydalba, ie clinic, intensive care unit or elsewhere should be recorded. In addition, it is important in this type of medication to track whether the pathogens are changing in any way. Any safety-relevant events (such as side effects) that have occurred during treatment should be investigated by the sponsor and submitted to the competent European authorities.

Terminated4 enrollment criteria

Study to Optimize the Use of New Antibiotics

Bacterial InfectionsFungal Infection

Quasi-experimental intervention multicenter trial of patients treated with new antibiotics (before-after study). The study will be carried out in 14 hospitals of the Andalusian Public Health System with representation from all the provinces and has been designed in two phases: A first phase in which an observational study of historical preintervention cohorts of patients who have received either empirical or targeted treatment with ceftaroline, tedizolid, dalbavancin, ceftazidime-avibactam, ceftolozane-tazobactam and isavuconazole from January 2016 to December 2019 will be developed. Case detection will be carried out by locating the antimicrobial prescriptions in the electronic prescribing systems and / or pharmaceutical management systems of each hospital. A set of epidemiological, clinical, microbiological and prognostic variables will be completed in each case. A second phase or intervention period that will be applied to the cohort of patients treated with new antibiotics (intervention cohort) from January 2020 to June 2021. A quasi-experimental intervention study will be carried out through the development of a Program for Optimizing the use of Antibiotics (PROA) in Spanish, Antimicrobial Stewardship Program (ASP) in English, in the participating hospitals. It will consist in the development of a consensus document on the use of new antibiotics following a Delphi methodology, dissemination of the consensus document / guide among the participating hospitals and audit on the prescription of new antimicrobials after the implementation of the guide based on providing non-imposition advice and positive reinforcement to the prescriber. The recommendations will be consigned in a structured form, which will allow to evaluate the degree of follow-up of the recommendations. The audit will be performed on day 0-1 of the prescription. Cohort of bacteremia due to multiresistant microorganisms ("safety" cohort): In order to evaluate the safety of the use of new antimicrobials against therapeutic alternatives in syndromes where they are potentially a preferred option and parallel to the two phases, episodes for bacteremia by carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, carbapenem-resistant enterobacteria, vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus occurred in participating hospitals from 2017 to 2021 will be collected.

Unknown status25 enrollment criteria

Efficacy Study of Community-Based Treatment of Serious Bacterial Infections in Young Infants

Bacterial InfectionSepsis2 more

Approximately one-third of neonatal deaths in developing countries are due to infections acquired through the birth canal and/or exposure to an unclean environment soon after birth. Current World Health Organization recommendations for the management of infants younger than 2 months of age who have serious bacterial infections involve hospitalization and parenteral therapy for at least 10 days with antibiotic regimens containing penicillin or ampicillin combined with an aminoglycoside.However, in many settings throughout the developing world, this is not currently possible, nor is this standard of care likely to be feasible in the near future. Several studies have reported that for a variety of sociocultural reasons many families are unable or unwilling to access hospital-based care and their sick young infants do not get hospitalized, and instead, receive a variety of home-based antibiotic therapies, or none at all. In our community field sites, approximately 70% of families refuse hospital referral for a sick newborn, despite provision of transport. Thus, there is an urgent need to define the role of community/first-level facility-based care versus hospitalization for the management of young infants with serious bacterial infections, and the potential for community-based parenteral antibiotics as an alternative strategy in resource poor areas with high neonatal mortality rates. Bang and colleagues have demonstrated significant reductions in neonatal mortality from infections in an underdeveloped rural district in Maharashtra, India by a field-based case management approach which used oral cotrimoxazole and intramuscular gentamicin given for 7 days as treatment for neonates with sepsis. This study is an equivalence randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing once daily IM ceftriaxone injection to once daily IM procaine penicillin and gentamicin injection, to once daily intramuscular gentamicin injection and twice daily oral cotrimoxazole, given for 7 days in babies with clinically-diagnosed possible serious bacterial infection (pneumonia, or sepsis with or without local infections such as skin or umbilical infections) whose families refused referral to a hospital. After supplementary informed consent, patients meeting specific inclusion and exclusion criteria are randomly allocated to one of the three regimens being tested. The study hypothesis is that all 3 regimens will perform equally well in the treatment of sepsis in a first-level facility setting.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria
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