View clinical trials related to Covid19.
Filter by:This is a single-arm, open-label study to assess the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, safety, and exploratory efficacy of tocilizumab (TCZ) for the treatment of pediatric patients from birth to less than 18 years old hospitalized with COVID-19 and who are receiving systemic corticosteroids and require supplemental oxygen or mechanical ventilation.
The purpose of this trial is to assess the safety, tolerability and treatment effect of the orally administered Caspase-1 inhibitor, belnacasan, for the treatment of patients with mild to moderate COVID-19 and to generate proof of concept for future trials.
Recently, obesity and excess visceral fat were shown to be major risk factors for the development of complications following Covid 19 infection. Recently, KDs have been suggested as possible weapons to tame the cytokine storm being described in those developing complications upon COVID-19 infection, and preclinical evidence strongly supports the hypothesis, with mouse models of COVID-19 infection in the elderly reporting strikingly better outcomes upon consumption of a KD. Short-term interventions that use low-calorie ketogenic diets may be prescribed for selected overweight or obese patients with type 2 diabetes or prediabetes. No data is available on the impact of a ketogenic diet on immune modulation following vaccination. We herein aim at investigating whether obesity and unhealthy body composition are associated with poor seroconversion following the upcoming COVID-19 vaccine administration, and whether consumption of a KD before and between COVID-19 vaccine doses leads to better immune response in obese subjects. 24 obese patients will be assigned to follow a LCKD regimen for 5 weeks.
This study is designed as a prospective, multicentric, clinical study to investigate the performance of the Panbio™ COVID-19/ Flu A&B Rapid Panel for the qualitative detection of COVID-19 antigen, Influenza A antigen (H1N1 and H3N2), and Influenza B antigen in human nasal swabs. This study is part of the performance evaluation to support the CE conformity assessment procedures.
To evaluate the immunogenicity and safety of the third dose SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine, Inactivated (Vero Cell) in adults aged 18 years and above, who inoculated the third dose after 3, 4, 5, or 6 months since finished two doses schedule of CoronaVac or BBIBP-CorV.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of low-frequency magnetic field in the hybrid treatment of COVID-19 patients, i.e., including magnetostimulation in the standard treatment. The authors evaluated among other things, the immunocorrective therapeutic effect of magnetostimulation, improving the defensive functions of the immune system and thus supporting the immune function by, among other things, suppressing the "cytokine storm". After application of low-frequency magnetic field in the hybrid treatment of COVID-19 patients, the authors expected: a decrease in the level of proinflammatory factors (IL - 6), restoration of homeostasis in the body with regards to the range of parameters evaluated in laboratory tests (WBC, MONO, PLT, CRP, d-dimers) and normalization of the following parameters: arterial blood pressure, the number of breaths/min, saturation, temperature.
This study aims to investigate the effects of a single dose of psilocybin, delivered in the contextof pre- and post-dose psychotherapy, on symptoms of depression and burnout suffered by healthcare clinicians as a result of frontline work in the COVID pandemic.
The clinical spectrum of COVID-19 can be very heterogeneous: from mild flu-like symptoms, to the form with severe pulmonary impairment (dyspnoea, tachypnoea, PaO2 / FiO2 ratio below 300 at arterial blood gas sampling, pulmonary infiltrates covering more than 50% of the respiratory surface); up to 5% of patients tend to rapidly develop acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) with or without acute cardiac damage, underlying a phase of systemic hyperinflammation (cytokine storm) that may result in shock, multi-organ failure and death
Background:The impact of the emergence of SARS-CoV-2 variants on the severity and clinical outcomes of COVID-19 is controversial. Whether virological characteristics including the mutational patterns of the different viral proteins (e.g., Spike, NSP proteins, ORF6) could be associated with a different immune response and subsequent severity of the disease is unknown. ln the next coming months, new variants carrying the same or new mutational patterns will continue to emerge. Monitoring their dynamics over time and their impact on disease severity is required for refining national and international disease control policies. Main objective: To unravel the relationships between specific viral mutations/mutational patterns and the clinical outcomes of COVID-19 in patients hospitalized in intensive care units (ICUs) for acute respiratory failure following severe SARS-CoV-2 infection. Design of the study Prospective multicentre observational cohort study Schedule for the study: Inclusion period: 24 months; Participation period: 28 days ; Total duration : 24 months + 28 days;
The Sponsor has developed a rapid screening tool intended to determine if the subject tested has COVID-19.