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Cutaneous Leishmaniases clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Cutaneous Leishmaniases.

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NCT ID: NCT05493059 Not yet recruiting - Primary Health Care Clinical Trials

Study of Cases of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Treated With Miltefosine in French Guiana, Retrospective Study

MILT2022
Start date: August 8, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Miltefosine is the only oral treatment currently available for Cutaneous Leishmaniasis. Despite several reports of good efficiency in other countries of South America, miltefosine remains limited to a compassionate use in France. The objective of this study is to collect data regarding the efficacy, safety and acceptability of miltefosine in patients treated in French Guiana since 2017.

NCT ID: NCT05332093 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Cutaneous Leishmaniases

Spatial Analysis of Host-parasite Interactions in Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in Ethiopia

SpatialCL
Start date: March 21, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Cutaneous leishmaniasis manifestations range from self-healing localized skin ulcers/nodules to diffusely spread chronic lesions. Knowledge on the host-parasite interactions underpinning the different clinical presentations is scarce, in particular for L. aethiopica infections where disease can be extremely severe. Our aim is to define differences in skin immune responses and parasite virulence in CL patients at single cell/parasite level and how it underpins the different clinical presentations (localised, mucocutaneous and diffuse), by producing the first spatially-resolved 'ecological' map of the lesions.

NCT ID: NCT04515186 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Cutaneous Leishmaniases

Combination, Miltefosine Monotherapy for Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in New World

Start date: January 26, 2021
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates if the combination of thermotherapy (one application, 50⁰C for 30") and 3 weeks of miltefosine is safe and have a comparable cure rate with the current recommended first line treatments comprising meglumine antimoniate for 3 weeks for the treatment of uncomplicated cutaneous leishmaniasis cases in the New World.

NCT ID: NCT04512742 Completed - Leishmaniasis Clinical Trials

A Clinical Study to Develop a Controlled Human Infection Model Using Leishmania Major-infected Sand Flies

LEISHChallenge
Start date: October 16, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The disease leishmaniasis mainly occurs in hot and tropical countries, affects millions of people and causes around 20,000 deaths across the world every year. Leishmaniasis is caused by the Leishmania parasite and is transmitted by sand flies. The parasite is tiny and not visible to the naked eye, whereas the sand fly is visible but small and inconspicuous. There are different types of leishmaniasis which can affect the skin (cutaneous leishmaniasis) or the internal organs of the body (visceral leishmaniasis). Some of the milder forms will produce skin problems which will be localised, whilst other forms of leishmaniasis will cause widespread skin changes. The skin lesions of cutaneous leishmaniasis can be disfiguring if left untreated. There are some treatments for leishmaniasis but many of them are not easy to use or don't work well. Therefore, new treatments are needed including vaccines that prevent or work against leishmaniasis. A solution being adopted for other diseases, which the investigators now wish to adopt for leishmaniasis is to develop a 'Controlled human infection model' (CHIM). These models involve deliberate exposure of individuals to an infection, in order to better understand how the disease works and to test potential vaccines and treatments. They have contributed knowledge that has led to advances in the development of treatments. This is study builds on an our initial successful study, FLYBITE, where uninfected (disease-free) sand flies were used to test the safety aspects and ensure that sand flies were able to bite human participants in a controlled environment. The investigators observed no major adverse effects and it was well tolerated by participants. The investigators therefore wish to proceed to a study using sand flies infected with a form of leishmaniasis that causes localised skin disease and is treatable, on the pathway to assessing future vaccines.

NCT ID: NCT04004754 Completed - Clinical trials for Cutaneous Leishmaniases

Outcomes of Complicated CL in Ethiopia Treated With Miltefosine

Start date: May 7, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in Ethiopia causes severe dermatological mutilations. Forms that require systemic treatment are cLCL, MCL, and DCL. National guidelines recommend equally all drugs that are also used for VL treatment. Miltefosine is one of these recommended medications but remains underused due to scarcity of drugs. Outcomes of patients receiving miltefosine have never been documented systematically in Ethiopia until today. This is needed to provide evidence to advocate for increased access to miltefosine in Ethiopia, and to establish baseline data for future research on CL treatment options. The aim of this study is to document treatment outcomes of patients with cLCL, MCL, and DCL receiving systemic treatment using miltefosine within a routine care setting located in an endemic area in Ethiopia.

NCT ID: NCT04001335 Terminated - Clinical trials for Cutaneous Leishmaniases

Diagnosis of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Using the CL-detect Rapid Test in Travelers and Migrants in Belgium

RapidLeish
Start date: August 12, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (CL) is a neglected tropical disease which is increasingly seen in travelers and migrants evaluated in travel clinics of non-endemic countries. Various CL species are present in different parts of the world, and these different species vary in severity, prognosis and therapeutic approaches. At ITM, diagnosis of CL in suspected patients is done using a skin biopsy, analyzed by diagnostic PCR, and species typing PCR. This method is invasive, and diagnosis is often delayed for days to weeks. The new antigen-based CL Detect Rapid Test uses dental broach sampling and has results within 30 minutes. Dental broach samples left over from the Cl Detect Rapid test may still be used for PCR including species typing. How well the CL Detect Rapid Test performs in the varied population of a travel clinic and whether it is possible to use dental broach sampling for further PCR tests in this population needs to be evaluated The aim of this study is to study the performance of the CL Detect Rapid Test and whether dental broach sampling can replace skin biopsy for CL at ITM.

NCT ID: NCT03929016 Completed - Clinical trials for Visceral Leishmaniasis

Single Oral Dose Escalation Study of DNDI-0690 in Healthy Subjects

Start date: April 4, 2019
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate how the test medicine DNDI-0690 is taken up and broken down by the body and will also look at the safety and tolerability of the test medicine after a single dose. This is the first time the test medicine DNDI-0690 will be administered to humans.

NCT ID: NCT03837431 Completed - Clinical trials for Cutaneous Leishmaniases

Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Diagnostic Study

Start date: February 13, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The performance of the CL Detect Rapid test will be tested in individuals with suspected cutaneous leishmaniasis in Ethiopia using both skin slit and dental broach samples against a combined reference of microscopy and PCR. Alternative sampling methods will also be evaluated.

NCT ID: NCT03435419 Completed - Clinical trials for Cutaneous Leishmaniases

Evaluation of Point-of-care Tests for the Diagnosis of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in Afghanistan

CLeishPOCAFG
Start date: April 16, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

New point-of-care (POC) tests are needed and assessing the performance of these tests for cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) in Afghanistan may help increasing the number of CL patients with access to accurate diagnosis, and enable prompt treatment. Simpler tests could improve treatment access and benefit patients and communities, by reducing the risk of sequelae and the risk of disease transmission. CLeishPOCAFG aims to advance the diagnosis of CL by using more accurate and field-amenable methods.

NCT ID: NCT03292835 Suspended - Clinical trials for Cutaneous Leishmaniases

Complex Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Healing Study in Algeria

LeiClean
Start date: September 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

This study evaluates the effect of clean wound management and dressing on complex zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by L. major in the MENA region (Algeria). The patients will participate in the wound dressing themselves. The objective is to determine the amount of patients that can avoid systemic chemotherapy with pentavalent antimony which is compulsory for patients with complex CL lesions. In Algeria, this requires expensive hospital care because of the eventual toxic side effects of Sb(V).