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Active clinical trials for "Infections"

Results 441-450 of 6584

Antiviral Activity of Oral Probiotics

Lower Respiratory Tract InfectionUpper Respiratory Tract Infection

The aim of this study is to test saliva samples obtained from healthy human participants for anti-viral activity after they have consumed S. salivarius probiotic in a powder format.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Skin Preparation for Elective Foot and Ankle Surgery

Microbial ColonizationFoot and Ankle Disorders

Surgical site infections (SSIs) make about 31% of all nosocomial infections and they are the most common hospital-acquired infection. For foot and ankle elective interventions, SSI rate is reported between 0.4% and 3.6%. This study will investigate the effectiveness of skin cleaning with isopropyl alcohol and scrubbing with chlorhexidine soap before standard skin preparation in reducing microbial load and surgical site infections for elective foot and ankle surgeries. Current standard of care includes skin preparation with iodine or chlorhexidine solution prior to sterile draping and the start of surgery. Standard of care will be applied to all patients. The use of an additional "pre-scrub" with isopropyl alcohol and scrubbing with chlorhexidine soap will be applied to the experimental group. The control group will receive only the standard of care skin preparation with iodine or chlorhexidine solution prior to draping.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Temocillin Pharmacokinetics in Paediatrics

InfectionLiver Dysfunction1 more

Temocillin (6-methoxy-ticarcillin) is a beta-lactam antibiotic with exceptional resistance to most beta-lactamases. In this context, it is now increasingly used as carbapenem-sparing antibiotic in patients with suspected infection by Enterobactreriaceae suspected to produce extended-spectrum beta-lactamases. Little is known about dosing and elimination of temocillin in children. While available literature of temocillin use in paediatrics refers mainly to its clinical efficacy in the treatment of urinary tract infections, the drug is also used for the treatment of suspicion of cholangitis in cirrhotic paediatric patients, and as antibiotic prophylaxis following an hepatic transplant in children (both off-label indications). There is, therefore, a pressing need to explore the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of temocillin in the paediatric population, in order to provide clear guidance on an appropriate dosing regimen. The study objectives are: (1) characterisation of the pharmacokinetics (PK) of temocillin in 3 paediatric populations, (2) proposal and development of a dosing schedule that can ensure therapeutic concentrations (40% ƒT > MIC) and optimize treatment chances of success, and (3) characterization of MICs of microbiological strains (when available) to temocillin.

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Plasma Protein Binding and PK/PD of Total and Unbound Temocillin Non-ICU Patients

PharmacokineticsAntibacterial Agents5 more

Multidrug resistance towards Gram-negative pathogens makes essential the re-examination of older compounds. Temocillin is a penicillin originally marketed in the 1980s but then largely abandoned. It, however, shows a marked ß-lactamase stability (including most classical and extended-spectrum TEM, SHV, CTX-M enzymes and AmpC ß-lactamase). Temocillin is approved for the treatment of bacterial infections of the chest, the lungs, the kidney, the bladder, as well as bacterial infections of the bloodstream and wound infections. Temocillin efficacy depends primarily from the time interval during which the unbound plasma concentration remains above the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the antibiotic against the target organism(s). Unfortunately, no comprehensive pharmacokinetic data are available in non-critically-ill patients. The primary objective of the study is characterize the pharmacokinetics of total and unbound temocillin in non-ICU patients, and, on this basis, to propose optimized dosage regimens in this population. The secondary objectives are (i) to look for possible correlations between the plasma protein profile and the unbound temocillin concentrations; (ii) to investigate the impact of the level and nature of circulating plasma proteins on the unbound temocillin concentration. The study will be non-randomized, uncontrolled, prospective, open label, interventional, and monocentric. It will include a population pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic analysis of the data obtained. The study will enroll patients ≥ 18 years in need of a treatment with temocillin for (i) complicated urinary tract infection and pyelonephritis (associated or not with bacteremia), or (ii) lower respiratory tract infection, or (iii) abdominal infection, and requiring ≥ 4 days of hospitalization. Blood samples will be obtained at day 0 (control) and after 2 and 4 days of drug treatment (full pharmacokinetic evaluation over 8 to 12 h post-administration). Total and unbound temocillin concentrations in plasma will be quantified by a validated analytical method. A population pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamics model of plasma total and unbound concentrations of temocillin will be obtained by Bayesian algorithms using Pmetrics software, driven by the predicted plasma total and unbound concentration. The model will be used to assess the probability of target attainment of temocillin.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Contribution of a Clinical Pathway for the Treatment of Hip Prosthesis Infections

Hip Prosthesis Infection

The main objective is to determine the contribution of a clinical pathway to improve the effectiveness of medico-surgical management of hip prosthesis infections in terms of clinical cure. The hypothesis raised is that the implementation of a clinical pathway would improve the performance of the medical and surgical management of chronic infections of prosthetic hip.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Impact of Clinical Guidance & Point-of-care CRP in Children: the ARON Project

Infection

Impact of clinical guidance & point-of-care CRP test in children: the ARON project Trial Design: multicentre, cluster-randomized, parallel group pragmatic trial Trial Participants and setting: Children aged 6 months to 12 years of age with an acute illness episode presenting to in-hours general practice or out-of-hospital community paediatrics offices Intervention(s) Diagnostic algorithm: Clinical decision tree: clinician's gut feeling something is wrong, dyspnea, temperature ≥40ºC YES to any : point-of-care CRP ≥5mg/L: additional testing or refer to secondary care <5mg/L: safety netting*, only prescribe antibiotics if advised (guidelines) NO to all : are AB considered? YES : point-of-care CRP ≥5mg/L: safety netting*, only prescribe antibiotics if advised (guidelines) <5mg/L: safety netting*, do not prescribe antibiotics NO: safety netting *safety netting advice: inform parents on what to expect and what to look out for interactive parent information booklet based on previous research Control: Diagnosis and Treatment/Management as per usual care: - guidance on AB prescribing: o Belgische Commissie voor de Coördinatie van het Antibioticabeleid (BAPCOC) guide (updated November 2019) o RIZIV consensus meeting report "Antibiotics in children in ambulatory care" Primary Endpoint: Antibiotic prescribing rate at index consultation Secondary Endpoint(s) - time until full clinical recovery (during follow up (day 1 to day 30)) - additional investigations (at index consultation and/or during follow up (day 1 to day 30)) - re-consultation (during follow up (day 1 to day 30)) - antibiotic prescribing rate (during follow up (day 1 to day 30)) Exploratory endpoints at the index consultation: additional investigations (X-Ray, blood tests, urine tests, etc.) During a follow-up period (day 1 to day 30): - referral to hospital - additional investigations (X-Ray, blood tests, urine tests, etc.) patients with full clinical recovery at day 7 and day 30 admission to hospital mortality cost-effectiveness patient satisfaction qualitative study: endpoints Planned Sample Size: 7000 Timing of the intervention: Intervention at index consultation (at presentation to primary care) Follow-up duration: 30 days follow-up Duration of the trial (FPI-CSR): 43 months

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Trial of Scheduled Versus Treatment Administration of Donor-Derived Viral Specific T-cells for Viral...

Allogeneic Stell Cell TransplantViral Infection

The purpose of this research study is to learn more about the use of viral specific T-lymphocytes (VSTs) to prevent or treat viral infections that may happen after allogeneic stem cell transplant. Allogeneic means the stem cells come from another person. VSTs are cells specially designed to fight viral infections that may happen after a stem cell transplant (SCT). Stem cell transplant reduces the body's ability to fight infections. Viral infections are a common problem after transplant and can cause significant complications. Moreover, treatment of viral infections is expensive and time consuming, with families often administering prolonged treatments with intravenous anti-viral medications, or patients requiring prolonged admissions to the hospital. The medicines can also have side effects like damage to the kidneys or reduction in the blood counts, so in this study the investigators are trying to find a better way to treat these infections.

Recruiting20 enrollment criteria

Modulate Cellular Stress in the Immune Cells to Reduce Rate of Symptomatic Viral Infection

Endoplasmic Reticulum StressViral Infection1 more

To determine the efficacy of metformin in reducing the rate of symptomatic YF17D infection, and to elucidate the effects of metformin on YF17D viremia and the downstream adaptive immune response, we hereby propose a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial that is coupled with a system biology approach. We plan to recruit 44 healthy volunteers aged 21-40 years, with a Body Mass Index of 20-25 kg/m2, have no known drug allergies and are not currently receiving regular immune-modulating therapy such as metformin, NSAIDs, paracetamol, corticosteroids or statins. The age range that we propose will ensure that our volunteers are likely to be healthy and not be on long-term medication for other concurrent medical conditions. This would abrogate the confounding effect of YF17D infection enhancement by cross reactive antibodies that we have previously shown. Informed written consent will be obtained before any physical examination is performed. All consented subjects will undergo screening which includes a full physical examination, vital signs measurement, clinical laboratory tests and urine pregnancy test (for female subjects of child-bearing potential) Eligible subjects will be randomized 1:1 to either metformin 1000mg or placebo twice daily for 7 consecutive days (Days 1-7). On Day 4, subjects will be administered one dose of YF17D before study drug dosing. Aim 1 tests the hypothesis that prophylactic metformin reduces ER stress and thus attenuates the post-infection pro-inflammatory response for reduced rate of symptomatic outcome. The primary objective for Aim 1 is to determine the efficacy of metformin in reducing the rate of symptomatic YF17D infection using a randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial. Aim 2 explores the effectiveness of metformin, either through its action on ER stress or other pathways that differentially regulate the expression of pro- and anti-viral host factors, in inhibiting live attenuated vaccine infection and downstream adaptive immune responses. The primary objective for Aim 2 is to elucidate the effects of metformin on YF17D viremia and the downstream adaptive immune response.

Recruiting21 enrollment criteria

INterest of the Negative Predictive Value of Integrons in Choosing a Narrow-spectrum Empirical anTibiotic...

Urinary Tract Infections in Children

INVICTUS PED primary objective is to show the non-inferiority of an empirical antibiotic therapeutic management guided by the early detection of integrons in the urine, compared to a usual empirical antibiotic treatment, for the recovery of children admitted to the pediatric emergency department (ED) with a non-severe urinary tract infection (UTI) with fever

Recruiting26 enrollment criteria

Microbiome and Association With Implant Infections

Breast CancerBreast Cancer Female1 more

The most common tissue expander-related infections are from Staphylococcus and Pseudomonas species. In addition, from breast tissue microbiome studies, Staphylococcus and Pseudomonas show variable abundance across samples. The investigator hypothesizes that participants undergoing mastectomy with high initial abundance of Staphylococcus and/or Pseudomonas are more likely to develop subsequent tissue expander-related infections from these respective organisms.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria
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