View clinical trials related to Bacterial Infections.
Filter by:Secondary bacterial pathogen infection has been demonstrated to aggravate COVID-19 clinical outcomes. Bacterial infections acquired during a hospital stay are likely resistant to several antimicrobial medicines, making COVID-19 patient management difficult. As a result, it is believed that aerosolized colistin might be a viable choice for treating secondary bacterial infections caused by gram-negative resistant strains in individuals who also have COVID-19 infection.
Prospective observational cohort consisting of all adult patients admitted to participating critical care units (ICU and CCU) during the study period, with blood cultures collected as part of their care, and who did not express any objection to participating. For each patient, data will be collected prospectively for each blood culture set collected.
Phase I clinical study to evaluate the effect of multiple doses of itraconazole on the pharmacokinetics of BV100 in healthy volunteers.
Study to Investigate the Penetration of Rifabutin Into the Lung After Multiple Intravenous Administrations of BV100
With the aim to pilot a full-scaled trial to reduce unnecessary antibiotics in women with suspected uncomplicated urinary tract infections, twenty general practices in Bavaria, Germany, will be randomized to deliver patient management based on phase-contrast microscopy and urinary dipsticks or to usual care. Primary endpoints are recruitment and retention rates.
This is a Phase 1, single center study to investigate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of three dose-level groups of WCK 6777 (ERT and ZID combination), and two dose-level groups of ERT alone and ZID (WCK 5107) alone in 52 healthy adult male and female subjects aged 18 to 45 years old (both inclusive). Seven treatment cohorts will be evaluated in this study. WCK 6777 will be evaluated in three cohorts - Cohorts 1, 4 and 7- of 8 subjects each (6 study drug combinations and 2 placebos); ERT will be evaluated alone in two cohorts - Cohorts 2 and 5- of 8 subject each (6 ERT and 2 placebos); and ZID will be evaluated in two cohorts, Cohorts 3 and 6, of 6 subjects each (all ZID). The study will be placebo-controlled and double-blinded in all cohorts except Cohorts 3 and 6. No placebo subjects are included in standalone ZID cohorts, since adequate safety data for higher doses of ZID alone in comparison with placebo are available from completed Phase 1 studies of WCK 5107 (ZID) alone and the ZID-only arms of WCK 5222 (cefepime + ZID) studies. The primary objective is to assess the safety and tolerability of three dose-escalating regimens of WCK 6777 ( ERT and ZID combination) and two-dose escalating regimens of standalone ERT or ZID following single daily doses for 7 days in healthy adult subjects.
The primary purpose of the study is to evaluate whether weekly administered XEMBIFY® plus Standard Medical Treatment (SMT) over a one-year period will reduce the rate of major bacterial infections per participant per year in participants with hypogammaglobulinemia (HGG) associated with B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) in comparison to the Placebo plus SMT group.
The aim of this study is to identify predictive factors of infections caused by multidrug-resistant organisms in patients with cirrhosis and to develop and validate (internally and externally) a predictive model that might be useful to use in clinical settings to stratify the risk and lead clinical decision-making strategies.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate how Aztreonam (ATM) and Avibactam (AVI) are processed in pediatric participants. This study also aims to understand participant safety and effects in pediatric participants. The study is seeking participants who are: - 9 months to less than 18 years of age - Hospitalized - Suspected/known to have a gram-negative infection - Receiving intravenous (iv, given directly into a vein) antibiotics - Being treated for complicated infections of various body parts that includes the abdomen, urinary tract, blood stream, and lungs. - Participants will receive either ATM-AVI or best available therapy (BAT). - Both therapies will be given through a vein. - Participants with complicated abdominal infections will also receive iv Metronidazole (MTZ). - Participants on ATM-AVI treatment who have anaerobic infections will also receive iv MTZ at the study doctor's discretion. - The iv dose of ATM-AVI will be based on the participant's weight and kidney function. - The study doctor will determine the iv dose of BAT. - During the first 2 study days, participants on ATM-AVI therapy will have 5 blood draws in small quantities. - Starting on day 4, the study doctor will decide if participants may be switched to oral therapy. - Participants will receive a maximum of 14 days of ATM-AVI treatment. - After discharge from the hospital, 1 study visit may be required. - Depending on the participant's response, the study duration will be from 33 to 50 days. - The investigator will contact participants by phone 28 to 35 days after the last study treatment to check participants health status.
This is a randomized, open label, comparative Phase II trial being conducted to determine whether fecal microbiota transplant using Penn Microbiome Therapy (PMT) products helps standard therapy eradicate antibiotic-resistant bacteria.