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Acute Febrile Illness clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Acute Febrile Illness.

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NCT ID: NCT05292508 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Acute Febrile Illness

Comparison of Rates of Antimicrobial Use in Febrile Patients With or Without the Use of C-reactive Protein Blood Test

CREATIB
Start date: February 26, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In Health Posts of rural areas operated by the Government of Nepal, there are limitations of tests to differentiate between bacterial and viral infections. Due to this, health workers are obliged to prescribe antimicrobials (antibacterials) just on the basis of clinical features. This can lead to irrational use of antimicrobials, consequently contributing to antimicrobial resistance. C-reactive protein is the marker of inflammation which rises during bacterial infection but rarely rises during viral infection. The investigators wish to compare the effect on antimicrobial usage of using CRP(C-Reactive Protein) test, a rapid diagnostic test used to differentiate bacterial and viral infection, with usual standard of care, by carrying out a cluster-randomized controlled trial. The investigators plan to carry out this study in eight Health Posts of Resunga, Dhurkot and Gulmi-Durbar Municipalities of Gulmi District. The investigators will randomly allocate four Health Posts (clusters) to the intervention arm- CRP TESTS in addition to Usual Standard of Care, and four Health Posts (clusters) to the control arm- Usual Standard of Care Alone. The investigators plan to study all patients above one year of age presenting with fever or a history of reported fever with a duration of up to 7 days in Health Posts. Primarily, the investigators will assess the rates of antimicrobial use per patient who presents with febrile illness. Secondarily, the investigators will also assess the outcome of illness of the patient such as need for subsequent hospital admission or severe or complicated illness. This testing method will supplement the existing methods to differentiate bacterial and viral infections based on history and clinical examination by health professionals as a part of usual standard of care in the Health Posts included in this study.

NCT ID: NCT05050825 Recruiting - Malaria Clinical Trials

Validation of a CDSA Strategy to Reduce Antibiotic Prescription in Senegal

Start date: May 3, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This trial aims to validate a novel clinical care strategy based on a electronic clinical decision support algorithm (CDSA) combined with point of care rapid diagnostic tests by evaluating its impact on antibiotic prescription and clinical outcome of children and adolescent presenting at primary healthcare facilities with non-severe acute illness compared to routine practice. The trial also aims to assess the usability of the CDSA strategy. The study will be conducted in primary healthcare facilities across different epidemiological regions of Senegal.

NCT ID: NCT04878549 Recruiting - Fever Clinical Trials

Transcriptomic Responses for the Identification of Pathogens

TRiP
Start date: May 2, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Acute undifferentiated febrile infection (AUFI) is a common presenting syndrome in low-resource settings and better diagnostics are urgently needed to improve patient management and guide disease prevention interventions. Assessment of the host gene expression response to infection in endemic populations has demonstrated significant promise as a new approach to identifying patients with enteric fever and for potential in differentiating between other causes of AUFI. Signatures identified through new data analytic techniques could be developed into a point-of-care test for use in endemic settings. In this multisite diagnostic evaluation study we will collect prospective clinical, laboratory and diagnostic data from two endemic settings to evaluate host gene expression signatures for detecting enteric fever and for determining the cause of AUFI in LMIC settings.

NCT ID: NCT04629053 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Acute Febrile Illness

Causes and Outcomes of Febrile Illness in Health Facilities in Rural South and Southeast Asia

SEACTN-WP-B
Start date: June 21, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This prospective multi-site observational study aims to describe causes and clinical outcomes of acute febrile illness as well as host biomarkers in patients aged >28 days residing in rural areas in Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, the Thai-Myanmar border region, and Bangladesh and presenting with acute febrile illnesses (≤ 14 days duration) to participating health facilities. This study is funded by the UK Wellcome Trust. The grant reference number is 215604/Z/19/Z