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Active clinical trials for "Diarrhea"

Results 31-40 of 801

Coupons for Safe Water Project

DeathDeath6 more

Guaranteeing access to safe drinking water is still a challenge in rural households in developing countries, and unsafe water sources are responsible for millions of deaths each year around the world. Coupons for free dilute chlorine solution are a cost-effective and effective way of ameliorating child health and reducing diarrhea incidence. It is still an empirical challenge, however, to see if the positive health effects will be maintained when the program is implemented at scale. In this study, investigators conduct a randomized controlled trial (RCT) at scale to study the impacts of a chlorine coupon program implemented at health clinics on child health, including self-reported diarrhea, fever, and cough incidence in the previous two weeks. Investigators further investigate the pathway of the impact, such as self-reported and objectively measured use of chlorine and frequency of visits to health clinics.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Trial to Evaluate Diarrhoea Discontinuations at 3 Cycles in Patients With Early-stage HER2+, HR+...

Early-stage Breast CancerHER2 Positive Breast Cancer1 more

A Randomized Phase II Study to Evaluate the Incidence of Discontinuations due to Diarrhoea at 3 Cycles in patients with Early-stage HER2-positive (HER2+), Hormone Receptor-positive (HR+) Breast Cancer treated with Neratinib plus Loperamide prophylaxis versus Neratinib with Initial Dose Escalation plus PRN Loperamide prophylaxis versus Neratinib plus Loperamide plus Colesevelam prophylaxis.

Recruiting29 enrollment criteria

A Study on the Safety and Immune Responses to the GVGH altSonflex1-2-3 Vaccine Against Shigellosis...

Diarrhoea

The aim of the current clinical study is to evaluate, for the first time in humans (FTIH), the safety and immunogenicity of the altSonflex1-2-3 candidate vaccine against S. sonnei and S. flexneri serotypes 1b, 2a, and 3a. The vaccine will be first administered in adults 18 to 50 years of age in Europe. Subsequently, the vaccine will be administered to a shigellosis-endemic population in Africa, first in adults 18 to 50 years of age, then in children 24 to 59 months of age, and finally in infants 9 months of age. Infants will also receive a third vaccination. Three different doses of the vaccine [low (Dose A), medium (Dose B), and high (Dose C) amounts of antigen] will be evaluated using an age de-escalation approach (from least vulnerable adult population to most vulnerable paediatric population). The results of this study will allow the selection of the most appropriate dose for further vaccine development in infants 9 months of age, which is the main target age group for this vaccine.

Recruiting64 enrollment criteria

Reduce Crohn's-Associated Diarrhea With Sodium Channel Therapy

Crohn's DiseaseInflammatory Bowel Disease

Crohn's disease is an inflammatory disorder that can affect any part of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Some patients still experience persistent diarrhea or other symptoms such as abdominal pain even when their Crohn's disease is in remission. Diarrhea and/or abdominal pain that is not responsive to standard therapies can significantly affect a patient's quality of life and ability to work. The purpose of this study is to test the safety and effectiveness of the drug ranolazine in reducing Crohn's disease-associated diarrhea and other symptoms. Ranolazine is approved by the US Food & Drug Administration (FDA) for chronic angina (a heart condition). This study is investigating if ranolazine could be used in the setting of Crohn's disease.

Enrolling by invitation22 enrollment criteria

Mechanism Exploration of Anti-HER-2 Small-molecule Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor-related Diarrhea and...

Breast Cancer

Small-molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) that target HER2 are routinely used to treat patients with HER2 (+) breast cancer. The main adverse reactions included diarrhea, nausea, and rash, among which diarrhea had the highest incidence. It can reduce the quality of life and medication compliance of patients, and further affect the efficacy of TKI anti-tumor therapy. Therefore, the investigators conducted this study to establish a risk assessment model before TKI treatment, in order to screen out the high-risk population and influencing factors of TKI-associated diarrhea, and planned to carry out corresponding animal experiments to verify the relationship between various mechanisms and the main mechanism in TKI-associated diarrhea and to explore the corresponding treatment methods.

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Preventative Intervention for Cholera for 7 Days

CholeraWater-Related Diseases1 more

The first objective of our study is to develop a theory-driven evidence-based targeted water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) intervention for household members of diarrhea patients in South Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) through formative research and community engagement. The second objective is to conduct a randomized controlled trial of 2,320 household members of 580 severe diarrhea patients to evaluate the effectiveness of the developed targeted WASH intervention in terms of: 1. reducing diarrheal diseases household members of cholera and severe diarrhea patients; and 2. increasing WASH behaviors.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Cholera-Hospital-Based-Intervention-for-7-Days (CHoBI7) Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) Case...

CholeraDiarrhea

Objective: The investigators objective is to develop and evaluate the effectiveness of a case area targeted water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) intervention in reducing cholera infections and increasing sustained WASH behaviors in transmission hotspots in a ring around cholera cases.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Bismuth Subsalicylate's Role in the Prevention of Travelers' Diarrhea

Diarrhea TravelersAntibiotic Resistant Infection

The purpose of this study is to determine if the use of prophylactic bismuth subsalicylate (BSS) has an effect on the acquisition of travelers' diarrhea (TD) or antimicrobial resistance (AMR) genes in fecal samples among international travelers who departed from the United States to South East Asia, South Central Asia, or Africa. Our hypotheses will be tested using a double-blinded, placebo controlled randomized clinical trial with participants from a pre-travel health clinic in the United States.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria

Defined Fecal Microbiota Transplantation for Clostridium Difficile Diarrhea

Active C. Difficile Colitis

The study is on indefinite HOLD due to the loss of funding that occurred during the pandemic emergency. Subsequently, a key collaborator left our institution, and as a near-term result, the protocol awaits reactivation. Three patient subjects were enrolled, all 3 patients/subjects were cured of the infection, and there were no adverse events or sequelae observed or reported. The aim of the study continues to confirm and extend the work of Trede and Rask-Madsen (Lancet 1989;1:1156-1160) that administration of a defined fecal microbiota will lead to rapid and sustained resolution of C. difficile-associated chronic relapsing diarrhea. FDA required 4 non-geriatric qualified patients to be studied before including the elderly. However, C. difficile-associated chronic relapsing diarrheal illness is predominantly a disease of the elderly, so this requirement GREATLY impeded timely enrollment. No protocol deviations have occurred. The current rationale behind FMT for CDI is that the introduction of microbes from a healthy donor should allow for the restoration of a normal microbial community in the diseased host with consequent suppression of C. difficile colonization and disease pathogenesis. The first modern use of FMT was reported in a 1958 case series of 4 patients with pseudomembranous enterocolitis. The first case of confirmed CDI treated with FMT was reported in 1983; treatment was curative. Until 1989, retention enemas were the most common technique for FMT. Alternative methods for delivering FMT have included fecal infusion via duodenal tube (1991), rectal tube (1994), and colonoscopy (1998). FMT for recurrent CDI has been used successfully, whether administered by nasogastric tube, rectal administration by colonoscopy, or rectal tube, including self-administration at home by enema. FMT has proven to be remarkably effective and remarkably safe without any significant problems (see below and attached reviews and meta-analyses). Increasing interest is emerging regarding the changes in the intestinal microbiota associated with CDI. In 2008 Chang et al. constructed small (< 200 sequences per subject) 16S rRNA gene libraries from the stools of 4 patients with first-time CDI and 3 patients with recurrent CDI. Based on 16S rRNA gene classification, they found that the fecal microbiomes of patients with an initial episode of CDI were similar at the phylum level to healthy subjects (i.e., the majority of sequences belonged to dominant fecal phyla Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes), while a major reduction or loss of Bacteroidetes was observed in patients with recurrent CDI. The loss of the Bacteroidetes was accompanied by the expansion of other phyla, including Proteobacteria and Verrucomicrobia, which are normally minor constituents of the fecal microbiota. Khoruts et al. (2010) compared the microbiota of a patient with recurrent CDI before and after FMT by using terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism and clone-based 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Before transplantation, the patient's microbiota was deficient in members of Bacteroides and instead was composed of atypical fecal genera such as Veillonella, Clostridium, Lactobacillus, Streptococcus, and unclassified bacteria similar to Erysipelothrix. Two weeks after the infusion of donor fecal suspension, the bacterial composition of her feces approached normal and was dominated by Bacteroides sp. strains. In 1989, Tvede and Rask-Madsen used a combination of nine normal fecal organisms to treat 6 patients with chronic relapsing C. difficile diarrhea. These investigators cultivated 10 strains of bacteria, including Enterococcus (Streptococcus) faecalis (1108-2), Clostridium inoculum (A27-24), Clostridium ramosum (A3I-3), Bacteroides ovatus (A40-4), Bacteroides vulgatus (A33-14), Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron (A33-12), Escherichia coli (1109), E. coli (1108-1), Clostridium bifermentans (A27-6), and Blautia producta (Peptostreptococcus productus) (1108-2) in broth for 48 h to a concentration of approximately 10 to the 9th power bacteria/mL. Two mL from each bacterial culture were admixed with 180 mL saline that had been pretreated in an anaerobic chamber for 24 h; the bacterial suspension was then instilled rectally. This procedure was followed promptly by a decline of C. difficile to undetectable levels by culture and the loss of detectable toxin from the stools. Normal bowel function was restored within 24 hours, and abdominal symptoms disappeared. Stool cultures and toxin assays for C. difficile remained negative during a year of follow-up. It is especially important to note that feces from none of the 6 patients contained Bacteroides sp.

Enrolling by invitation2 enrollment criteria

Trial to Evaluate Dietary Supplements to Maintain Gut Health During Travel

Diarrhea

Passive immunoprophylaxis is a class of dietary supplements that is lawfully marketed in the US for maintenance of gut health (GH). This randomized, double-blind, clinical trial will evaluate passive immunoprophylaxis (Travelan®) product compared with placebo, to assess the ability to maintain normal gut function during travel. The results of this clinical trial will be used to evaluate the use of a dietary supplement to maintain GH during deployment and travel and is not intended to support a marketing application of any dietary supplement as a drug or biological product for human use.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria
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