The Effect of Dietary Intervation on Endothelial Glycocalyx in COVID-19 Patients.
COVID-19Endothelial DysfunctionThe food supplement Endocalyx is considered to support the endothelial glycocalyx integrity by supplying sulfated polysaccharides, anti-oxidant enzymes and additional substrates for glycocalyx synthesis. The investigators will study the effect of Endocalyx on endothelial, vascular and left ventricular myocardial function in patients with COVID-19 infection.
Clinical Significance of Subclinical Myocardial Involvement in Recovered COVID-19 Patients Using...
COVID-19MyocarditisIntroduction: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) remains a major health issue resulting in >800,000 deaths as of 30th August 2020. A concerning discovery of COVID-19 is the involvement of the myocardium. Several case studies including one from our group (recent study publication in JACC Cardiovascular Imaging led by the principal investigator of this grant application) have demonstrated subclinical myocardial inflammation in patients using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) who have recovered from COVID-19. Furthermore at a cellular level, a recent autopsy study indicated that the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 is present in the myocardial tissue. The study further described invasion and viral progeny occurring in the myocardial interstitial cells and as such is a concerning development with the longer-term implications being unknown. These concerns have been noticed by the cardiology and non-cardiology medical community, with some expressing concerns of a new cause for cardiomyopathy and heart failure secondary to COVID-195. Therefore, it is critical that further studies are conducted to determine the longer-term outcome for patients.
Study on Three Doses of an Inactivated COVID-19 Vaccine in Chinese Pulmonary Tuberculosis Patients...
COVID-19Pulmonary TuberculosisThis is a randomized, double-blind, parallel-controlled study, for evaluation of safety and immunogenicity of three doses of an inactivated COVID-19 vaccine (CoronaVac) in pulmonary tuberculosis patients aged 18-75 years. 200 tuberculosis patients and 40 healthy adults aged 18-75 years will be recruited in this study. Of them, 200 pulmonary tuberculosis patients will be randomized at a 1:1 ratio to receive two doses of standard dosage CoronaVac plus one dose of double dosage CoronaVac or two doses of standard dosage CoronaVac plus one dose of standard dosage CoronaVac at a schedule of 0, 28, 56 days, respectively. Other 40 healthy subjects served as an external control group will be vaccinated with two doses of standard dosage CoronaVac at a schedule of 0, 28 days. The occurrence of adverse events within 28 days after each dose vaccination and serious adverse events within 3 months after full vaccination will be observed. In addition, blood samples will be collected on day 0 before the first dose and 28 days and 3 months after the last dose vaccination in all participants and 28 days after second dose in pulmonary tuberculosis patients. Each subject will remain in this study for 5 months (healthy group) or 6 months (tuberculosis group).
Using MOST to Optimize an Intervention to Increase COVID-19 Testing for Frontline Essential Workers...
COVID-19COVID-19 TestingCOVID-19 testing is essential to controlling the COVID-19 pandemic to break transmission chains and reduce community transmission. However, Black and Latino/Hispanic populations in lower status frontline essential occupations such as food preparation, retail, building maintenance, personal services, and in-home health care have serious barriers to COVID-19 testing and, therefore, insufficient testing rates. The proposed study will use the multiphase optimization strategy framework to address the problem of low COVID-19 testing rates for this population: We will test the effects of four distinct candidate intervention components and then create an efficient multicomponent made up of the most effective combination of the components that can be rapidly scaled up in community settings to boost COVID-19 testing rates.
Enabling Family Physicians to Reduce Vaccine Hesitancy and Increase Covid-19 Vaccine Uptake
Covid19COVID-19 VaccineThe approval and distribution of COVID-19 vaccines is an important milestone in the fight against the pandemic. However, although vaccines are widely recognized as a key public health measure to control infectious disease, there are still people who remain hesitant to get vaccinated. In Canada, 83% of Canadian adults have received or are willing to receive the vaccine. However, nearly 20% of adults and a larger proportion of parents of younger children remain concerned about receiving vaccines. In the context of a project to enable family physicians to identify vaccine-hesitant patients and deliver a tailored COVID-19 vaccination outreach campaign, the Canadian Practice Information Network, a tool for primary care providers to communicate with their patients, will be used to engage and address vaccination hesitancy in Canada. The study will identify information needs about COVID-19 vaccination among community-dwelling patients in three Canadian provinces and will assess the effectiveness of a tailored COVID-19 vaccine digital health communication strategy for primary care practices to address vaccination hesitancy and improve COVID-19 vaccination uptake. A two-arm cluster randomized trial design will be conducted in primary care practices in three Canadian provinces: Ontario, British Columbia, and New Brunswick. The study will use a convenience sample of primary care practice in these provinces. Recruited participants will be randomly allocated to the intervention and control groups. Patients assigned to the control group will receive health messages unrelated to the COVID-19. Participants in the intervention group will receive a series of tailored messages on COVID-19 vaccination targeting the main factors for hesitancy to address their concerns and persuade them to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Aggregated survey responses across practices will be used to create segments of unvaccinated patients reflecting age, language, education level, rurality, sex, gender, ethnicity, and their attitudes or reasons for vaccine hesitancy or access barriers. Then, tailored messages will be created in a way that is meaningful to the recipients in the different segments. The primary outcome is the proportion of vaccine-hesitant individuals who receive a COVID-19 vaccine during the intervention period. The secondary outcome is the overall COVID-19 vaccine uptake.
Intranasal Heparin Treatment to Reduce Transmission Among Household Contacts of COVID 19 Positive...
COVID-19Coronavirus-induced disease 2019 (COVID-19) is an infection caused by a virus whose full name is severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). This is a new and rapidly-spreading infectious disease which carries a significant risk of death, has brought massive economic impact globally and has proved hard to contain through public health measures. While we currently have effective vaccines, they do not protect the whole community and the constant threat of new mutations means there is an urgent need to identify new approaches to reducing community spread of infection. Heparin is a naturally occurring sugar molecule which has been used for a century to treat a range of medical problems including heart attacks, strokes, and blood clots. It has also been investigated as a treatment for pneumonias. Recent research suggests it binds to the SARS-CoV-2 virus in such a way it may reduce the virus' ability to enter cells. This may be an important way to tackle the early stages of infection which occurs inside the nose. Therefore, this medication could be used amongst people with early COVID-19 infection and amongst their household contacts to reduce the rate of virus transmission during local outbreaks. If proven effective there are many other potential uses as primary prophylaxis for people working in high risk areas, for travel, for protection in high risk crowded environments such as nightclubs, or sporting events. Heparin is safe, inexpensive, available worldwide and if effective could be rapidly used across the world to slow progression of the current pandemic. Further there are recent studies suggesting that the risk of brain complications as part of "long COVID", are directly related to the amount of virus in the nose. Reducing the viral load in the nose is thought to be effective in reducing these "long COVID" complications. This study will explore the effect of the intervention on viral load and long COVID. In this study, researchers want to investigate this medicine in people who have been identified by a COVID-19 swab test to be in the early stages of infection(defined as the index case), and amongst their household contacts. Each participant would take the medicine or a dummy control solution by spray into their nose three times a day for 10 days. The study will investigate if there are fewer people who contract SARS-CoV-2 infection by day 10 amongst households who receive the medicine than households which receive the dummy control.
DEXamethasone EARLY Administration in Hospitalized Patients With Covid-19 Pneumonia
COVID-19Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome2 moreThe aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of dexamethasone in hospitalized adults with COVID-19 pneumonia who do not require supplementary oxygen on admission, but have high risk of developing acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). This is a prospective, multicenter, phase 4, parallel-group, randomized and controlled trial that is open-label to investigators, participants and clinical outcome assessors. Eligible participants include adults (age 18 years or older), diagnosed with SARS-CoV-2 infection, evidence of infiltrates on chest radiography or computerized tomography, peripheral capillary oxygen saturation ≥94% and 22 breaths per minute breathing room air, and high risk of developing ARDS defined by a lactate dehydrogenase higher than 245 U/L, C-Reactive Protein higher than 100 mg/L, and absolute lymphocytes lower than 800 cells/µL. Eligible participants will meet two of the three before analytical criteria associated with severe COVID-19. Patients will provide written informed consent. Exclusion criteria include patients with a history of allergy to dexamethasone, pregnant or lactating women, oral or inhaled corticosteroids treatment within 15 days before randomization, immunosuppressive agent or cytotoxic drug therapy within 30 days before randomization, neutropenia <1000 cells/µL, human immunodeficiency virus infection with CD4 cell counts <500 cells within 90 days after randomization, dementia, chronic liver disease defined by ALT or AST ≥5 times the upper limit of normal, chronic kidney injury defined by a glomerular filtration rate ≤30 ml/min, hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis, uncontrolled infection, and patients who are already enrolled in another clinical trial. Study participants will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive dexamethasone base 6 mg once daily for seven days or standard of care. The primary endpoint is to prevent of development of moderate ARDS. Based on the Berlin criteria, moderate ARDS is defined by a PaO2/FiO2 ratio >100 mmHg and ≤200 mmHg. Study participants will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive dexamethasone versus standard of care using a randomization platform. Included participants will be hospitalized at the time of randomization. The study will be undertaken at Infanta Leonor-Virgen de la Torre University Hospital, Enfermera Isabel Zendal Emergency Hospital, and Infanta Cristina Hospital, Madrid, Spain.
A Phase III Clinical Study of a SARS-CoV-2 Messenger Ribonucleic Acid (mRNA) Vaccine Candidate Against...
COVID-19SARS-CoV-2Approximately 28,000 subjects will be enrolled in this trial. Eligible subjects will be stratified by age (<60 years of age and ≥60 years of age, the proportion of elderly people ≥60 years old is planned to be ≥25%) and randomly assigned into the study group and the control group at a ratio of 1:1 (14,000 in each group) to be intramuscularly administered with the investigational vaccine or placebo in a 2-dose regimen at an interval of 28 days. The experimental vaccines will be cross-vaccinated after available data of the investigational vaccine show that expected efficacy and good safety have been achieved (i.e., subjects in the study group will be vaccinated with placebo and those in the control group will be vaccinated with the investigational vaccine in the same schedule as stated above ). After the completion of the second dose for crossover vaccination, subjects will be followed up for 12 months for safety observation. An immunogenicity subgroup (n≥3000) and a reactogenicity subgroup (n≥6000) will also be included in this trial to evaluate the humoral immunity induced by the investigational vaccine and the solicited adverse events observed within 7 days post immunization. All enrolled subjects will be followed up for the evaluation of protective efficacy as well, which will be primarily characterized by the incidence rate (person-year) of COVID-19 cases collected from 14 days after complete series. Adverse events will be collected over 0-28 days after each vaccination and serious adverse events will be collected from Dose 1 through 12 months post complete series.
The Effect of Tele-Health Education Provided in the Postpartum Period in the Covid 19 Pandemic
Postpartum DepressionAnxiety StateIn the planned study, it was aimed to examine the effect of tele-education offered in the postpartum period in the covid 19 pandemic on the levels of depression, attachment and anxiety of women.
Augmentation of Immune Response to COVID-19 mRNA Vaccination Through OMT With Lymphatic Pumps
Covid19This study will evaluate the effectiveness of utilizing Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment (OMT) procedures as an addition to current mRNA COVID-19 vaccines in terms of enhancing the immune response of participants as assessed by looking for increased levels and duration of antibody titers.