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Active clinical trials for "Acute Lung Injury"

Results 301-310 of 969

Evaluation of Safety & Efficacy of BIO-11006 Inhalation Solution in Patients With ARDS

Respiratory Distress SyndromeAdult

This Phase IIa pilot study is a placebo controlled, multicenter study to evaluate safety and efficacy of aerosolized BIO-11006 Inhalation Solution in ARDS patients. The subjects will be randomized 1:1 to either BIO-11006 125 mg twice daily plus standard of care or placebo plus standard of care. The treatment will continue for up to 28 days. The study will enroll up to 40 adult ARDS patients in up to eight sites within USA.

Completed31 enrollment criteria

Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs) for Treatment of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARD) in Patients...

Blood And Marrow TransplantationAdult Respiratory Distress Syndrome

The goal of this clinical research study is to learn about the safety of giving mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) to patients who have ARDS. Researchers also want to learn if these cells can help control ARDS when given with drugs that are routinely used to treat ARDS. In this study, participants will receive 1 infusion of MSCs. This is an investigational study. MSC infusions for the treatment of ARDS is investigational. Up to 20 patients will take part in this study. All will be enrolled at MD Anderson.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Cellular Immuno-Therapy for COVID-19 Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Acute Respiratory Distress SyndromeCovid19

The clinical picture of the novel corona virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) disease (COVID-19) is rapidly evolving. Although infections may be mild, up to 25% of all patients admitted to hospital require admission to the intensive care unit, and as many as 40% will progress to develop severe problems breathing due to the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). ARDS often requires mechanical ventilation, with a 50% risk of mortality. Researchers at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OHRI) have been studying the potential therapeutic role of mesenchymal stromal/stem cells, or MSCs, for the treatment of ARDS for over a decade. This has led to the world's first clinical trial using MSC therapy for patients with severe infections (sepsis) which is often associated with ARDS (NCT02421484). This trial demonstrated tolerability, and potential signs of efficacy. In addition, the investigators have established expertise in producing clinical-grade MSCs and have received approval from Health Canada for the use of MSCs in three different clinical studies. This protocol consists of 2 sequential trials using the same trial infrastructure, noted as the Phase 1 trial 'CIRCA-1901' and the Phase 2a trial 'CIRCA-1902'. CIRCA-1901 is an open-label, dose-escalating and safety trial using a 3+3+3 design to determine the safety, and maximum feasible tolerated dose of repeated delivery of Umbilical Cord Mesenchymal Stromal Cells (UC-MSC) intravenously. The investigators will enroll up to 9 patients; each receiving repeated unit doses of UC-MSCs delivered by IV infusion on each of 3 consecutive days (24±4 hours apart) according to the following dose-escalation schedule (3 patients per dose panel): (i) Panel 1: 25 million cells/unit dose (cumulative dose: 75 million MSCs), (ii) Panel 2: 50 million cells/unit dose (cumulative dose: 150 million MSCs), (iii) Panel 3: up to 90 million cells/unit dose (cumulative dose: up to 270 million MSCs). If no safety issues are identified, we will continue to the Phase 2a trial. CIRCA-1902 is a single-arm, open-label extension of the CIRCA-1901 trial to assess early signs of efficacy (major morbidity and mortality). The Phase 2a trial (CIRCA-1902) will enroll 12 patients to assess early signals of benefit on mortality and major morbidity in a high risk, high mortality population.

Completed20 enrollment criteria

A Study of APL-9 in Adults With Mild to Moderate ARDS Due to COVID-19

COVIDCovid-197 more

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of APL-9 in adults with mild to moderate ARDS (acute respiratory distress syndrome) caused by COVID-19 who are hospitalized and require supplemental oxygen therapy with or without mechanical ventilation. It is thought that COVID-19 activates the complement system, part of the immune system that responds to infection or tissue damage, and increases inflammation in the lungs. APL-9 has been designed to inhibit or block activation of part of the complement pathway, and potentially reduce inflammation in the lungs. Part 1 of the study is open-label to evaluate safety; all participants will receive APL-9 plus standard of care. Part 2 of the study is double-blind, randomized; participants will receive either APL-9 or the vehicle-control plus standard of care.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

First in Human SAD and MAD Study of Inhaled TD-0903, a Potential Treatment for ALI Associated With...

Acute Lung Injury (ALI) Associated With COVID-19Inflammatory Lung Conditions Associated With COVID-19

This is a phase 1 study in healthy subjects to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of single (Part A and B) and multiple (Part B) doses of inhaled TD-0903.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Prone Position in Patients on High-flow Nasal Oxygen Therapy for COVID-19 (HIGH-PRONE-COVID-19)...

Acute Respiratory Distress SyndromeCOVID-19

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) induces high mortality, particularly in the context of COVID-19 disease. Preliminary data from patients with ARDS related to COVID-19 disease appear to show significant effectiveness of prone positioning in intubated patients in terms of oxygenation as well as nasal high flow therapy before intubation. It should be noted that in Jiangsu province, secondarily affected, nasal high flow combined with the prone position was successfully integrated into care protocols. The investigators hypothesize that the combined application of nasal high flow and prone positioning can significantly improve the outcome of patients suffering from COVID-19 pneumonia by reducing the need for tracheal intubation and associated therapeutics such as sedation and paralysis, resulting in both individual and collective benefits in terms of use of scarce critical care resources. Investigators hypothesize that the combined application of nasal high-flow and prone positioning can significantly improve the outcome of patients suffering from COVID-19 pneumonia by reducing the need for intubation and associated therapeutics such as sedation and paralysis, resulting in both individual and collective benefits in terms of use of scarce critical care resources.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Chest Physiotherapy in Tracheotomized Patients

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Positive expiratory pressure (PEP) breathing is common for treatment of different lung diseases and can increase lung volume and increase elimination of secretion from the airways. Today there is no evidence whether the treatment is effective or not for patients in the intensive care unit. The purpose of this study is to evaluate if PEP breathing can increase oxygenation for patients in the intensive care unit during weaning from the ventilator after acute respiratory distress syndrome. PEP breathing will be applied on the tracheal cannula for 15 minutes. Measure of the PEP effect will be done before, during and for 20 minutes after PEP breathing.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Impact of ECMO Cannula Chlorhexidine-impregnated Dressings to Decrease Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation-cannula...

Cardiogenic ShockExtracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation Complication2 more

The Dressing-ECMO trial is a prospective, open-label, multicenter, controlled trial randomizing patients who received percutaneous ECMO to cannula chlorhexidine-impregnated dressing vs standard dressing. The study goal is to determine if cannula chlorhexidine-impregnated dressings can reduce the number of cannula major-related infections with or without bloodstream infection

Not yet recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Risk Factors for Early Acute Lung Injury After Liver Transplantation in Children

Acute Lung InjuryLiver Transplantation1 more

The goal of this observational study is to identify the risk factors for early acute lung injury (ALI) after liver transplantation in children .The main questions it aims to answer are what the risk factors are for early ALI in children and to evaluate the predictive value for the development of ALI.Participants will be divided into non-ALI group and ALI group according to whether they had ALI in a week after liver transplantation.Researchers will compare the difference between the two groups and use multivariate logistic regression analysis to screen the risk factors of ALI, and receiver operating characteristic(ROC) curve was used to evaluate the predictive efficacy of risk factors.

Not yet recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Roflumilast as add-on Therapy in Early Cases of ARDS

Respiratory Distress SyndromeAdult

Mild cases of ARDS will be included in a two-arm protocol, to receive 500 mcg of roflumilast daily up to 28 days (FDA approved dose for COPD) plus standard of care versus standard of care alone. Approximately 76 hospitalized patients with ARDS will be enrolled in this study. Eligible patients will be randomized at ratio of (1:1) to receive either roflumilast plus standard of care or standard of care alone.

Completed10 enrollment criteria
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