View clinical trials related to Covid19.
Filter by:This is an open-label and non-randomized study to demonstrate the immunogenicity and safety profile in adults that received the Ad5-nCoV vaccine at least 21 days but no later than 90 days after the first dose of Sputnik V. The non-inferiority hypothesis is used for the evaluation of the exploratory objective. The ratio of Geometric mean titers (GMTs) of SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibody in participants on Day 21 post-vaccination of Ad5-nCoV (previously received a 1st dose of Sputnik V) (Group A) and two doses of Sputnik V (Group B) is used for the evaluation of this hypothesis. It is assumed to enroll about 100 subjects for each group. Additionally, 45 participants will be selected from Group A (to enter the immunogenicity subgroup for cellular immune response analysis. According to the above, considering extra subjects for compensating about 10% dropouts, the sample size of Group A is designed to be 450, for Group B is 200. Participants enrolled in Group A (1st dose of Sputnik V plus 1 dose of Ad5-nCoV) must have only received the 1st dose of Sputnik V and the interval between the previous injection (1st dose of Sputnik V) and the day of vaccination with Ad5-nCoV should be between 21 and 90 days. The comparator (Group B) will be the samples stored at the immunology lab of the Buenos Aires University Medical School, corresponding to individuals vaccinated with 2 doses of Sputnik V.
Experimental, single-arm study in participants with comorbidities, previously immunized with 2 doses of CoronaVac, who will receive a booster vaccine with 1 dose of the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine.
When the literature search is conducted, it is seen that there are many studies examining the effects of COVID-19 disease on individuals in various disease groups (MS, stroke, Parkinson, COPD, asthma, etc.) and age groups (adult, geriatric, etc.). However, it has been determined that there is no study examining the impacts of this disease on functional capacity, physical activity, pulmonary function, emotional state, sleep, and quality of life in healthy young adults. This study will reveal whether COVID-19 disease causes an effect on the mentioned parameters in young adults. The aim of recent study is to investigate functional capacity, respiration, pain, depression, sleep and quality of life in young adults post COVID-19. For this purpose, participants' upper extremity and lower extremity muscle strength, 6-minute walking distance, O2 saturation, posture evaluation, spirometric evaluation, pain threshold, pain intensity, dyspnea, and leg fatigue measurements will be recorded. In addition to these measurements, general fatigue, quality of life, depression, physical activity level, sleep quality parameters will be evaluated and the data obtained will be analyzed with appropriate statistical methods. The goals of recent work, - To determine whether COVID-19 disease causes a decrease in functional capacity and changes in respiratory parameters in young adults, as well as to determine whether there are effects such as pain, depression, decreased sleep and quality of life, - To determine whether there are significant changes in the values of the relevant outcome measurements in all the mentioned parameters, - As a result of these, to determine the effects of COVID-19 disease on these parameters in young adults with objective, measurable data and to guide researchers and clinicians who do/will conduct studies on the subject.
This study will determine the immunogenicity of Spikogen in vaccine naïve individuals. Spikogen will be administered as two doses 1 month apart with a third booster dose either 1 or 3 months after the second dose. This study will provide key data on SARS-CoV-2 antibody responses.
The study aims to characterize the community burden (including the clinical features) and transmissibility of SARS-CoV-2 within the context of a functional antibody response. In addition,the study will assess the effect of the interaction of SARS-CoV-2 with influenza virus and RSV on disease severity and transmission dynamics. A household-level prospective cohort study will be conducted in one rural and one urban community located in Mpumalanga Province and North West Province, respectively. The study will be conducted for 12 months of intensive follow up (July 2020 to August 2021) with a post-intensive follow-up continuing for a further 16 months (until December 2022). Two hundred households; 1,000 study participants of all ages; will be randomly selected from a list of 327 hoseholds that participated and successfully completed a 10-months follow-up period in a study similar to that currently proposed, but directed at community burden and transmission dynamics of influenza, respiratory syncytial virus and other respiratory pathogens. Each household and household member will be enumerated and the HIV infection status and the level of immunosuppression of HIV-infected individuals will be assessed. Each household member will be followed twice per week during the intense follow-up period (12 months) of the study. During this period upper respiratory tract samples will be collected irrespective of presence of symptoms and data on key symptoms, healthcare seeking, hospitalization and death will be captured at each follow up visit. Respiratory samples will be tested by reverse transcriptase real-time polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) for SARS-CoV-2, influenza and RSV, and selected samples will be cultured and sequenced. An infection risk questionnaire will be administered to all study participants at enrollment and every month thereafter. Sera will be collected at enrollment and every 2 months during the 12-month intense follow-up period from all participants. In addition, sera will be collected every 2 months for a further 6 months following the 12-month intense follow-up period from study participants that tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 by rRT-PCR on respiratory specimens at 14, 16 and 18 months and from all study participants at 18 months. Sera will be tested for the presence of SARS-CoV-2, influenza and RSV antibodies. Wearable proximity sensors will be deployed for 8-12 days in each household over the 6-month intense follow-up period.
Establishment of a biological bank of subjects vaccinated against SARS-Cov-2 infection (COVID-BioVac)
In genome-wide association studies we identified potassium channels to be genetically linked to performance and neural activity of working memory in healthy humans. Furthermore, there is evidence in rodents and non-human primates that pharmacological blockade of potassium channels can improve working memory. In the present study, we aim at investigating the effects of 10 mg fampridine (4-Aminopyridine), a potassium channel-blocking agent, on working memory performance in individuals with Post-COVID-19-Condition with subjective cognitive impairment. The hypothesis is that fampridine improves working memory performance. Fampridine, especially its slow-release formulation (Fampyra®) is generally a safe drug with well-studied pharmacokinetic properties. It crosses the blood-brain barrier and reaches maximum concentration in the brain approximately 3.5h after single-dose administration. Evidence suggests that fampridine improves walking speed in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), which led to FDA and EMA approval for this indication. The mode of action by which fampridine improves walking speed is probably its blockade of a spectrum of potassium channels that are exposed in demyelinated axons, leading to mitigation of potassium leakage and normalization of nerve conduction. Additionally, an action of fampridine at central synapses and increase of neurotransmitter release has been discussed.
Assessment of the association between the severity of COVID-19 and SARS-CoV-2 NAb titers levels for up to six months following primary infection using a live virus NAb assay. Description of SARS-CoV-2 viral shedding and infectiousness during the first 30 days after infection in a group of unvaccinated hospitalized patients.
It is a Single Arm, Open Label Clinical Study to Evaluate the Immunogenicity and Safety of Sequential Immunization of V-01-351/V-01D Bivalence Vaccine in Healthy Adults Aged 18 Years and Older After the Vaccination of 2 Doses of Inactivated Vaccines. A total of 20 participants were enrolled.
Randomized, double-blind, multicenter parallel-group clinical study of safety, tolerability and immunogenicity of the Betuvax-CoV-2 vaccine. The aim of this study is to investigate the safety, tolerability and immunogenicity of the Betuvax-CoV-2 Recombinant vaccine for the prevention of coronavirus infection caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, suspension for intramuscular administration, 10 μg/ml and 40 μg/ml (Ltd. Institute of New Medical Technologies, Russia) in healthy adult volunteers, aged 18 to 60 (inclusive).