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Active clinical trials for "Pneumonia, Ventilator-Associated"

Results 111-120 of 315

Low Versus High Corticosteroid Use in Ventilator Associated Pneumonia

Ventilator Associated Pneumonia

patients who had >3 on Murray score and >6 on CPIS allocated randomly in two groups 120 patients in each. Group A received 30 mg/kg methyl-prednisolone slowly intravenous in 250 mL normal saline every 8 hours for only 48 hours while group B received 1 mg/kg/day methyl-prednisolone divided to three doses given every 8 hours for two weeks. Duration of the study last 16 days, Morbidity considered if no improvement in any or all clinical parameters of both Murray and CPIS scores and failure of weaning of patients from the ventilator at the studied period.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Time Interval for Changing Closed System Suction Catheters, Effect on Ventilator Associated Pneumonia...

PneumoniaVentilator Associated1 more

The purpose of this study was to compare the incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia between two groups of patients randomised to have closed system suction catheter changes every 24 hours and patients having closed system suction catheter changes every seven days or as required.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Nebulized Ceftazidime and Amikacin in Ventilator Associated Pneumonia

Pneumonia

Pseudomonas aeruginosa is one of the major causative microorganisms of ventilator-associated pneumonia often resistant to antibiotics. In experimental models, nebulization of antibiotics delivers high lung tissue concentrations of antibiotics in infected lungs and increases lung bacterial killing. The aim of the study is to assess the efficiency of nebulized ceftazidime and amikacin in the treatment of pneumonia caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa in ventilated patients.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Endotracheal Tube Cuff Pressures in Ventilated Patients

PneumoniaVentilator-Associated

There is no accepted standard for the frequency of monitoring endotracheal tube cuff pressures (ETCP). Investigators plan on comparing two strategies for monitoring ETCP in mechanically ventilated patients. The two strategies will be the currently employed practice at Barnes-Jewish Hospital (BJH) which requires ETCP to be assessed immediately after the endotracheal tube is placed and after any manipulation of the endotracheal tube to include repositioning, manipulation of the cuff volume, or presence of an audible leak. Investigator will compare this current practice to a more intensive monitoring of ETCP which is employed at some hospitals and includes the same elements as noted in the current practice plus monitoring ETCP every work shift (every 8 hours or three times per day).

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Study on Dynamic Environmental Exposome of ICU and the Establishment of Microbial Transmission Model...

Hospital Acquired InfectionVentilator-associated Pneumonia

HAI (Hospital-acquired infection) is very common in ICU,and lack of understanding of environmental exposure omics and environment-host microbial interactions restricts the prevention and control of HAI. In this project, the investigators try to analyze the spatial and temporal distribution characteristics and evolution of microorganisms and their functions in the ICU environment through metagenome.

Active12 enrollment criteria

CDC Prevention Epicenters Wake Up and Breathe Collaborative

Ventilator-associated Pneumonia

Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is a common complication of mechanical ventilation associated with significant morbidity, including prolongation of mechanical ventilation and increased ICU and hospital length-of-stay. Numerous strategies have been proposed to decrease the occurrence of VAP among ventilated patients. Most notably, optimizing the use of daily sedative interruptions and daily spontaneous breathing trials can improve sedative management, decrease ventilator time, improve outcomes for mechanically ventilated patients,and possibly decrease VAP.Combining daily sedative interruption with daily spontaneous breathing trials confers additive improvement in ventilator days, intensive care days, and possibly mortality compared to daily spontaneous breathing trials alone. The primary aim of this study is to determine the impact of an opt-out protocol for paired daily sedative interruptions and spontaneous breathing trials on VAP rates using a new streamlined VAP definition. The investigators will evaluate the responsiveness of CDC's proposed new surveillance definitions for ventilator-associated events to this quality improvement initiative. The study will be nested within the Epicenters Streamlined versus Conventional VAP Surveillance Study. Nine of the 18 hospitals in the larger study will be participating in this intervention arm.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Silver-Coated Endotracheal Tube to Reduce Ventilator Associated Pneumonia (VAP)

Respiratory Failure

The purpose of this study is to determine if the use of a silver-coated endotracheal tube (ETT) can reduce the incidence and/or delay the time of onset of VAP when compared to a non silver-coated ETT in patients who have been mechanically ventilated for >= 24 hours.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Impact of Tracheal Cuff Shape on Microaspiration in Intensive Care Units

Critical IllnessMechanical Ventilation Complication1 more

The investigators hypothesized that PVC tapered-cuff tracheal tubes would reduce microaspiration of gastric content as determined by pepsin level in tracheal aspirate.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Safety and Efficacy Study of Ceftolozane/Tazobactam to Treat Ventilated Nosocomial Pneumonia (MK-7625A-008)...

Healthcare-Associated PneumoniaVentilator-Associated Pneumonia1 more

This is a phase 3, multicenter, prospective, randomized study of intravenous (IV) ceftolozane/tazobactam versus IV meropenem in the treatment of adult participants with either ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia (VABP) or ventilated hospital-acquired bacterial pneumonia (HABP). The primary objective is to demonstrate the non-inferiority of ceftolozane/tazobactam versus meropenem in adult participants with ventilated nosocomial pneumonia (VNP) based on the difference in Day 28 all-cause mortality rates in the Intent-to-treat (ITT) population using a non-inferiority margin of 10%.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Defining Antibiotic Treatment Duration for Ventilator - Associated Lung Infection

Ventilator Associated PneumoniaPneumonia1 more

Intensive care units (ICUs), with high antibiotic consumption, are epicentres of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP) is the commonest hospital-acquired infection (HAI) in ICUs and is associated with a high morbidity and mortality in these vulnerable patients despite antibiotic therapy. No well-designed clinical trials studying antibiotic duration for VAP caused by predominantly non-fermenting Gram-negative bacteria have been conducted to date. Shortening antibiotic duration has the potential to improve individual patient outcomes and indirectly benefit other patients by reducing the selection pressure for multidrug resistant (MDR) bacteria within the ICU. The study aims to demonstrate clinical non-inferiority-superiority of a short duration of antibiotics (up to 7 days) versus prolonged antibiotic therapy (as per physician preference) in adults with VAP in Asia. Patients who have been ventilated for more than 48 hours will be screened daily for signs and symptoms of VAP according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention VAP criteria. Recruited patients will be reviewed daily for clinical signs of stability including temperature <38°C for 48 hours, systolic blood pressure >90mmHg without inotropes. Recruited patients will be randomised once they fulfill these clinical criteria of stability. In the intervention arm, antibiotics should be stopped within 7 days once the above criteria are fulfilled. In the control arm, antibiotics should be at least 7 days with the exact duration decided by the managing physicians. The primary outcome of the study is a combined endpoint of mortality and VAP recurrence at day 60 of recruitment. The study hypothesis is that a shorter duration of treatment for VAP (7 days or less depending on clinical response) is not only noninferior, but may also be superior to a longer duration (8 days or more). The secondary outcomes of the study include clinical parameters such as rate of acquisition of MDRO hospital-acquired infections, duration of ventilation and hospitalization and days of antibiotics use. The study team will also characterise the microbiome changes in study participants according to the type and duration of antibiotics. MDROs collected will undergo whole genome sequencing for transmission dynamics study. The study is a multinational multicenter study involving hospitals in Asia.

Completed21 enrollment criteria
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