View clinical trials related to Infection.
Filter by:This study assess whether there is any role of antibiotics to decrease wound infection and increase the success of surgery
FALCON is a Pragmatic multi-centre trial testing measures to reduce superficial or deep skin infection following abdominal surgery in low and middle income countries. The trial will recruit patients undergoing abdominal surgery. Recruited participants will be randomly assigned to four arms to receive different combinations of skin preparation and sutures for would closure: A. In this arm surgeon will use 2% alcoholic chlorhexidine for skin cleansing and non-coated suture for wound closure; B. In this arm surgeon will use 2% alcoholic chlorhexidine for skin cleansing and triclosan coated suture for wound closure; C. In this arm surgeon will use for operation 10% aqueous povidone-iodine for skin cleansing and non-coated suture for wound closure; D. In this arm surgeon will use 10% aqueous povidone-iodine for skin cleansing and triclosan-coated suture.
A disposable negative wound pressure device will be compared to standard sterile wound dressing in reducing the rate of wound infection after clean-contaminated surgical procedures on biliary tract and pancreas in patients at high risk for wound infection.
Antibiotic resistance is becoming a bigger problem. If the problem remains unsolved, the WHO predicts a return to the pre-antibiotic era. Overtreatment with antibiotics drives development of resistant bacteria and adverse events in patients, thus identification and rectifying factors leading to unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions are a public health problem. Urinary Tract Infections (UTIs) are the most commonly diagnosed infection in nursing homes (NH). A prevalence study showed that in up to 76% of all antibiotic prescriptions in Danish NHs the indication was UTI. In this particular group of patients with suspected UTI, the literature has repeatedly shown that a vast amount of these antibiotic courses are inappropriate. As people age, the prevalence of asymptomatic bacteriuria increases significantly. Asymptomatic bacteriuria is a condition that should not be treated with antibiotics. Thus, the treatment decision in this group should not rely on the result of urinary testing and should only commence, when classical urinary symptoms are present. Urinary testing of NH residents is one of the drivers of overtreatment. Therefore, a recent Danish guideline from Institute of Rational Pharmacology (IRF) on elderly with suspected UTI suggest that urine culture should only be performed when typical urinary symptoms are present and that antibiotic prescribing should be delayed until the result of the culture is available whenever possible. It is unknown to what extent Danish GPs follows these guidelines. NH residents are often immobile, therefore; the diagnostic process of UTI in NH residents differs from the norm, which could also explain some part of the inappropriate prescribing. Immobility introduces physical distance between patient and GP because the patient is unable to visit the General Practitioners office. Because home visits are rare, when a UTI is suspected, NH staff usually contacts the GP in writing, over the phone and occasionally in person to relate the patient history and physical findings. When another link in the communication chain between patient and GP is added, clinical information passes through additional health professionals and the risk of communication error and misunderstanding increases. Some forms of communications may be more suited to fit this setting than others. When communicating in person, it is possible to take non-verbal cues into account and immediately clear up insecurities. Communication by phone eliminates non-verbal cues, but a dialog about unclarified aspects is still attainable. Written communication, however, has none of the clarifying traits of the former, and to elaborate on the content the GP will have to contact the NH, which takes time in an already packed schedule. The investigators hypothesize that the more direct the contact form, the better the quality of clinical information, which leads to increased compliance with guidelines. Thus by proxy, our hypothesis becomes that compliance to guidelines increases with directness of contact form. The aim of this study is to investigate to which degree the guidelines on antibiotic prescribing for NH residents with suspected UTI are followed and how the communication form affects adherence to guidelines.
This is a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre, phase 2 study to evaluate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of orally administered AK0529 in Chinese adults with RSV infection.
This is a Phase 4, multi-center, open-label, randomized pragmatic superiority clinical trial comparing two strategies for initial or step-down oral therapy for complicated urinary tract infections (cUTI) after 0-48 hours of parenteral antibiotic therapy. The trial will evaluate the success and safety of a strategy of initial or step-down fosfomycin, administered at a dose of 3 g once daily, vs. a strategy of initial or step-down levofloxacin administered at a dose of 750 mg once daily. Investigator-directed adjustment to another adequate oral therapy is allowed 1) if the causative pathogen is not susceptible in vitro to quinolone initial or step-down therapy in a subject randomized to the levofloxacin strategy, OR 2) if the subject develops an intolerance or allergy to the initial step-down oral therapy and at the investigator's discretion, OR 3) the subject has an underlying condition posing increasing risk for adverse events from quinolone therapy. The duration of oral therapy (initial + investigator-directed adjustment if indicated) in each strategy is 5-7 days of any per protocol antibiotic to which the pathogen is susceptible. The dosing of oral therapy depends on creatinine clearance (CrCl). The trial will enroll approximately 634 patients that are either male or female aged 18 or older with cUTI from outpatient and inpatient settings. The study will take place over 25 months in up to 15 US sites. The primary objective is to compare Strategy 1 and Strategy 2 in terms of treatment success rates at Test of Cure (TOC).
The diagnosis of infectious endocarditis is not always easy and is based on several clinical and imaging arguments. Positron Emission Tomography - Computed Tomography (PET-CT) has been validated for endocarditis on prosthetic valves but few studies concern the native valves. The purpose of the study is to estimate the diagnostic sensitivity of [18F]-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose (18F-FDG) PET-CT in patients with endocarditis on native valves according to the European Society of Cardiology 2015 (ESC 2015) modified diagnostic criteria of infective endocarditis classified as definite at three months of follow-up (baseline test).
Phase IV, open, multicentre and single-arm study. 50 HIV infection naive patients with severe immunosuppression will be recruited to evaluate the efficacy and safety of elvitegravir / cobicistat / emtricitabine / tenofovir alafenamide as a first-line treatment.
The goal of our study was to investigate whether different methods of dressing could lower catheter-associated bloodstream infections.
The purpose of this study is to examine whether oral taking Lactobacillus rhamnosus GR-1 and Lactobacillus reuteri RC-14 from 28th week of gestation can reduce the GBS colonization rate of vagina and rectum in 35-37 weeks pregnant women as well as during laboring who present with GBS-positive at 28 weeks pregnancy. Through the results of our study, we try to investigate the role of probiotics in preventing the unnecessary tests, admission and antibiotic treatment in newborn with GBS-positive mother who deliver fewer than 4 hours after laboring and the influence of improving cervical diagnostics quality for postpartum Pap testing. Investigators hope the findings may have some effects on GBS sepsis and protocols as well as cervical diagnosis.