View clinical trials related to Infection.
Filter by:The study will identify the epidemiological and treatment profiles of acute peritonitis in Italy
The aim of this study is to compare the incidence of catheter associated culture-based urinary tract infection (UTI) after elective CD with or without preoperative placement of a urinary catheter.
The purpose of this study is to assess efficacy of a new 14-day sequential therapy for the rescue treatment of refractory Helicobacter pylori infection, and whether it is safe while maintaining an ideal eradication rates. The researchers also want to testify whether a double-dose rabeprazole has equal efficacy to double-dose esomeprazole to provide sufficient acid inhibition.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy, safety and immune mechanism of Sanjin tablets for the treatment of acute simple lower urinary tract infection and its influence on recurrence rate.
* Report the prevalence of fungal infections among patients with hematological malignancies in South Egypt Cancer Institute. * Detect the most endemic fungal pathogen isolated from patients with hematological malignancies in South Egypt Cancer Institute. *Antifungal susceptibility testing which guide the optimal approach to treat fungal infections. * detection of resistant gene expression by real time PCR. * Fungal genome sequencing analysis to determine the genetic back ground upon which mutation and resistance occur.
Consensual antibiotic protocols have been developed and validated locally by infectious disease specialists, internists and emergency physicians, in order to encourage their compliance. A preliminary study was conducted from June 2015 to February 2016, including 622 patients admitted to the emergency department for infectious syndrome such as / - Pneumoniae - Urinary tract infection - Cellulitis - Meningitis - Malaria - Febrile neutropenia - Febrile acute diarrhea - Fever back to the tropics - Angina - sexually transmitted infection This prospective study will observe and analyze the adherence of prescribers to these protocols. With description of patients who benefited or not the antibiotic protocol, according to a syndromic approach and analysis of the causes of non-adherence to the protocols. In order to limit the length of stay and reduce the cost of hospitalization..
Interleukin33 organize local immune reactions, especially at epithelial barriers. ST2 is the IL33 receptor. The sST2 rate is higher for patient living with HIV and is an independent predictable factor of mortality. Interleukin33 induce tissue Treg ST2+ lymphocytes proliferation and amphireguline production. Amphireguline is member of epithelial growth factors family, which contributes to tissue repair, and fibrose. Amphireguline also helps immunosuppressives functions. Targetting amphiregulin for people living with HIV who has poor restauration of LTCD4+ could be a future therapy.
A phase I/IIa, multinational, multicentric (IDIBAPS, IRSICAIXA, AARHUS, VUB, APHP), randomised, balanced by centre (to include participants from the 4 arms), open-label, controlled clinical trial. Each participant will be followed up a different time according to study arm: a minimum of 38 weeks in arm I, 31 weeks in arm II, 54 weeks in arm III and 26 weeks in the arm 4. The study duration will be 104 weeks from inclusion of the first participant. Participants will be randomised to one of the following 4 arms: - Arm 1 (study): 14 participants will receive 3 vaccines of HIVARNA01.3 prime, 2 MVA-vectored vaccine boosts, 1 dose of 10-1074 antibodies and 3 doses of romidepsin - Arm 2 (study): 14 participants will receive 5 vaccines of HIVARNA01.3, 1 dose of 10-1074 antibodies and 3 doses of romidepsin - Arm 3 (study): 14 participants will receive 5 vaccines of personalized RNA vaccine (HIVACAR01), 1 dose of 10-1074 antibodies and 3 doses of romidepsin - Arm 4 (control): 14 participants 1 dose of 10-1074 antibodies and 3 doses of romidepsin
The purpose of this study is to assess efficacy of a 14-day sequential therapy for the rescue treatment of refractory Helicobacter pylori infection, and whether it is safe while maintaining an ideal eradication rates.
Antibiotic resistance is a serious and increasing worldwide threat to global public health. One of antibiotic stewardship programmes' objectives is to reduce inappropriate broad-spectrum antibiotics' prescription. Selective reporting of antibiotic susceptibility test (AST) results, which consists of reporting to prescribers only few (n=5-6) antibiotics, preferring first-line and narrow-spectrum agents, is one possible strategy advised in recommendations. However, selective reporting of AST has never been evaluated using an experimental design. This study is a pragmatic, prospective, multicentre, controlled (selective reporting vs usual complete reporting of AST), before-after (year 2019 vs 2017) study. Selective reporting of AST is scheduled to be implemented from September 2018 in the ATOUTBIO group of 21 laboratories for all E. coli identified in urine cultures in adult outpatients, and to be compared to the usual complete AST performed in the EVOLAB group of 20 laboratories. The main objective is to assess the impact of selective reporting of AST for E. coli positive urine cultures in the outpatient setting on the prescription of broad-spectrum antibiotics frequently used for urinary tract infections (amoxicillin-clavulanate, third generation cephalosporins and fluoroquinolones). The primary endpoint is the after (2019) - before (2017) difference in prescription rates for the previously mentioned antibiotics/classes that will be compared between the two laboratory groups, using linear regression models. Secondary objectives are to evaluate the feasibility of selective reporting of AST implementation by French laboratories and their acceptability by organising focus groups and individual semi-structured interviews with general practitioners and laboratory professionals.