View clinical trials related to Covid19.
Filter by:The practice of providing palliative care in the situation of the COVID-19 pandemic in the perspective of physicians and nurses - survey study (PEOpLe-C19 study)
the SARS-CoV2 pandemic has led to a major reorganization of the French Hematology and stem cell transplant departments since march 2020. Since the allogeneic stem cell transplant cannot be delayed especially when patients with hematological malignancies are in a fragile remission, risking relapse at any time, the necessity to maintain safe hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) donations from match unrelated or family donors appears rapidly mandatory during the pandemic period. To increase the safety of voluntary donations, a SARS-CoV2 Polymerase Chain Reaction test has been recommended to donors by regulatory agencies. However, due to the lack of homogeneity of care at European level, some countries do not require SARS-CoV-2 testing in asymptomatic donors. In this case, the test is performed on additional EDTA tube accompanying the graft on arrival or in the case of a missing tube (not collected or forgotten), on few milliliters of the HSC graft. This circuit had the consequence of forcing the clinicians to wait for the test result before starting the patient's conditioning regimen. The graft being already collected and received at the transplant center, and the conditioning regimen lasting on an average of 5 days, this resulted in its conservation during this minimum period and therefore its freezing by the associated cell therapy unit. However, this practice has so far been exceptional regarding allogeneic transplants, which are primarily freshly infused to ensure to the recipient the highest viability and functionality of stem cells. Since the entire freezing-thawing and washing process may impact cell viability and delay the patient's aplastic recovery, this study aimed to analyze the results of one year of allogeneic transplants infused after freezing in terms of graft quality after thawing and clinical consequences.
The purpose of the study is to describe the safety and efficacy outcomes of a cohort of ICU patients with severe COVID-19 respiratory disease treated with therapeutic dose Apixaban for COVID-19 at a tertiary public health care setting.
TERABio Ltd. has developed a rapid screening tool intended to determine if a tested individual is COVID-19-free (Negative to COVID-19).
This is a study of the BinaxNOW Covid-19 Ag Card as a method to rapidly identify SARS-CoV-2 infection in asymptomatic children, teachers, and other school staff for exclusion. 240 students and 80 teachers in the Madison Metropolitan School District (MMSD) will be enrolled and can expect to be on study for up to 8 weeks.
retrospective cohort (non-experimental study) of COVID 19 patients assisted in hospitalization (severe and critical) between 2020 and 2021
There is an urgent need to identify effective treatments for SARS-CoV-2 infection that helps people recover quicker and reduces the need for hospital admission. The investigators develop an open, adaptive, platform trial to evaluate treatments, Fluvoxamine, Bromhexine, Cyproheptadine, and Niclosamide suitable for use in the community for treating COVID-like-illness that might help people recover sooner and prevent hospitalisation.
SARS-CoV-2 is a highly transmissible and pathogenic coronavirus that emerged in late 2019 and has caused a pandemic of acute respiratory disease, collectively called coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19). SARS-CoV-2 has a high transmission rate, and severe cases of COVID-19 require admission to hospital intensive care units with the need for mechanical ventilation and associated high mortality. Currently cases continue to rise in many countries as the 'second and third waves' of SARS-CoV-2 infection evolve. The authorized vaccines and most vaccines in development are focused on the major antigenic target of the virus, the SARS-CoV-2 spike (S) protein. Authorization was granted in Brazil by ANVISA for the Fiocruz/Oxford-AstraZeneca ChAdOx1-S COVID-19 vaccine as a 2-dose homologous vaccination regimen, 28- to 84-days apart. Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) was also granted for Sinovac Biotech's CoronaVac vaccine as a 2-dose homologous vaccination regimen, 28 days apart. Further vaccines, using different platforms are approved or expected to be approved for use against SARS-CoV-2. Most of the vaccines are expected to be authorized as 2-dose, homologous vaccination series. SCB-2019 is Clover's adjuvanted recombinant SARS-CoV-2 trimeric S-protein subunit vaccine. The SCB-2019 antigen includes SARS-CoV-2 S protein as a trimer fused to Trimer-Tag and is produced in Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO). SCB-2019 preserves the native trimeric structure of S-protein in the prefusion form and induces neutralizing antibodies to SARS-CoV-2. Trimer-Tag is derived from the fully-human C-propeptide domain of pro-collagen and is capable of self-trimerization, thus fusing any biologically-active proteins in-frame with Trimer-Tag. The resulting fusion proteins expressed in mammalian cells are secreted as disulfide bond-linked homotrimers. The immunogenicity and safety of different dose levels (3, 9, and 30 μg) SCB-2019 vaccine, administered as 2-dose regimen 21-days apart was assessed in a phase 1 clinical study. All dose levels were well-tolerated and induced neutralizing antibodies against S protein of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Based on the results of that study, Clover selected 30 μg of SCB-2019 in combination with the CpG 1018/alum adjuvant system for further evaluation in the phase 2/3 clinical program as having the most favorable benefit/risk profile. The pivotal study (CLO-SCB-2019-003) included approximately 30,000 healthy participants and individuals with stable pre-existing chronic medical conditions, is being conducted in multiple countries, including in Brazil. The primary purpose of that study (CLO-SCB-2019-003) is to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of SCB-2019 in the prevention of COVID-19. The study showed efficacy. Heterologous boost vaccinations using different platforms may elicit immune responses of greater magnitude and breadth than can be achieved by priming or boosting with the same vaccine (He et al, 2021, Spencer et al., 2021). Also, given the anticipated challenges of vaccinating large proportions of the population, especially with respect to supply, out-of-stock situations, and potential misadministration, it is important for policy makers to have data on flexible vaccination schedules, where the third dose might be different from the priming platform. Protein-based adjuvanted vaccines have the advantage of being from a known and licensed technology that can produce high quantities of vaccine. Protein-based adjuvanted vaccines have also been shown to be highly immunogenic, both in the context of COVID-19 (Keech 2020; Richmond 2021) and other licensed vaccines (Skwarczynski 2016). The purpose of this study is to compare the immunogenicity and safety of heterologous and homologous booster schedules in individuals who received ChAdOx1-S or CoronaVac vaccination previously. The study will be performed in 2 stages - Stage 1 will serve to down-select one of the SCB-2019 formulations for boosting. Stage 2 will compare homologous and heterologous booster regimens in individuals who have received a 2-dose primary vaccination series of either ChadOx1-S or of CoronaVac.
The overall project aim is to study outcomes after COVID-19 and influenza hospitalisation from 2016 - 2021 by retrieving data from the main social security carriers in Austria for the years 2010-2018
The purpose of the study is to examine whether a simple mindfulness intervention conducted via a virtual platform can reduce stress among pregnant women.