View clinical trials related to Communicable Diseases.
Filter by:The first line therapy for an initial episode of CDI (Clostridium difficile infection) is 10-14 days of oral vancomycin which is now recommended over metronidazole in the 2018 guidelines from the Association of Medical Microbiologists and Infectious Diseases of Canada (AMMI). Although response rates for the treatment of a first episode of CDI now approach 90%, approximately 25% of patients who have a complete response will develop recurrence (rCDI) within 8 weeks. Doctors' ability to predict recurrence is evolving, but remains very limited. The investigators hypothesize that by extending initial vancomycin therapy with a 2-week tapering regimen this will reduce the risk of rCDI. Starting at the end of the initial 14 days of therapy, participants will be randomized to receive an additional 14-days of placebo or vancomycin taper (125 mg orally twice daily x 7 days followed by 125 mg orally once daily x 7 days). This taper was chosen as it represents two steps of a commonly used 4-week vancomycin taper. The investigators' proposal to evaluate the extension of initial treatment from 14 to 28 days with a tapering dose of vancomycin represents a practical clinical trial that capitalizes on oral vancomycin's safety profile, worldwide availability, and relatively low cost.
IL-2 is a pleiotropic cytokine which can regulate or stimulate the differentiation and function of CD4+, CD8+ and NK cells. An opened-labelled trial and a retrospective study have indicated the incidence of infection is lower in the treatment of low-dose IL-2 combined with corticosteroid and immunosuppressor. We are going to conduct a multi-center prospective observational study to verify the above results.
A surgical site infection (SSI) is an infection that occurs after surgery in the part of the body
Antimicrobial resistance is a major threat worldwide and extended-spectrum beta-lactamase producing Enterobacteriales (ESBL-E) are a leading cause because of their wide dissemination. Gut microbiota seems to be correlated with multi-drug resistant organism carriage. This study thus aims to analyse the correlation between gut microbiota, ESBL-E fecal carriage and subsequent infection.
This study will evaluate the impact of matching donor human milk to the maternal secretor status of very preterm infants (<34 weeks gestation) on the gut microbiome. Half of enrolled infants will receive donor human milk which is matched their mother's secretor status and half will receive standard (unmatched) donor human milk, which is standard care in the neonatal intensive care unit.
Ascites is the most common complication of cirrhosis, and its development is associated with substantially increased mortality. Ascites infection including spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP), bacterascites and fungal infections. SBP is one of the most feared complications of ascites. The EASL guidelines recommend that diagnostic criteria of SBP is defined on the ascitic fluid polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMN) count ≥250 cell/μl, with or without ascites fluid positive culture. However, in clinical practice. Up to 30% of hospitalized patients are considered as suspicious SBP, and treated as SBP without a laboratory-confirmed cause of infection. and is present in 10-30% of all hospitalized patients with ascites. Besides, fungal infection in ascites was aslo related to high mortality in cirrhosis patients. Thus, to diagnose ascites infection promptly is the key step to prevent the complication. Since, the sensitivity of bacterial culture is limited even if ascites is directly injected into blood culture bottles at the besides. New method to identified the pathogen is needed. Here, we aim to use metagenomic next-generation sequencing(mNGS) to provide the first-ever demonstration of precision medicine for the diagnosis of ascites infection in hospitalized patients, with immediate impact on clinical care and patients outcomes. The method of mNGS is undertaken by BGI Genomics Company which is a licensed clinical diagnostic laboratory in China. In this multicenter and prospective clinical study, we are planning to detect ascites sample by mNGS and compare the performance of mNGS and routine microbiological testing. Ultimately, we aim to improve the diagnosis of ascites infection and improve patients' outcomes.
Oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) is now the most frequently diagnosed head and neck cancer in Denmark which is mainly due to the increase of Human Papillomavirus (HPV). Patients with HPV-positive OPSCC have a significantly higher survival rate compared to HPV-negative OPSCC. The traditional primary treatment modality in Denmark is Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT), and in advanced stages in combination with chemotherapy. Since 2009, Transoral Robotic Surgery (TORS) has enabled surgeons to perform minimally invasive surgery as an alternative to standard radiotherapy treatment which is considered the primary treatment for OPSCC in many countries. There is a lack of randomised trials comparing long-term functional outcomes after TORS or IMRT. Current data are mostly derived from retrospective studies with selection bias. However, several small retrospective studies have shown promising results when comparing the two treatment modalities in favour of TORS with regards to treatment related swallowing function and quality of life (QoL) without compromising survival outcomes. This study aims to evaluate the early and long-term functional outcomes following two treatment arms 1) TORS combined with neck dissection and 2) IMRT±concurrent chemotherapy with a special focus on swallowing-related QoL.
Patients diagnosed to have mild-moderate CDI will be randomized to receive IM-01 egg-derived anti-C. difficile polyclonal antibodies in increasing dosages, twice daily, for a total of 10 - 14 days. Resolution of diarrhea and other symptoms and fecal test parameters will be used to assess clinical effectiveness of Immunotherapy with IM-01 antibodies. Patients will be followed for recurrence of CDI. Subjects who are assessed as non-respondents to IM-01 will be reassessed and treated with standard of care CDI antibiotics for 10 -14 days.
The study is about the role of cellular neural networks-genetic algorithm in the diagnosis of periprosthetic hip infections. A retrospective case series of septic and aseptic loosening of primary hip arthroplasties is selected. The diagnosis of septic loosening is made according to well-established criteria (CDC 2014 and culture samples). The serial radiographs of the selected patients are processed using cellular neural networks-genetic algorithm. The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether neural networks (cellular neural networks-genetic algorithm), applied to conventional radiographies, are accurate, sensitive and specific for the early-discrimination of a periprosthetic hip infection, already diagnosed with well-recognized methods (CDC 2014).
Children enrolled in the study will receive either the prebiotic inulin or a placebo for 21 days during the study period. They will start taking the product seven days before transplant starts until 14 days after transplant. Stool will be collected twice weekly until thirty days after transplant or discharge, whichever occurs first. Stool samples will be sampled for metagenomic sequencing to identify the diversity of bacteria within the stool. They will also be analyzed for amount of short-chain fatty acid content (a breakdown product of inulin) as well as for presence of genes that confer antibiotic resistance. From 30 days after transplant until 100 days after transplant, two stool samples will be collected at regularly scheduled follow up appointments (near day 60 and day 100). No product (inulin or placebo) will be given during this time frame. The study period ends 100 days after transplant.