Clinical Trials Logo

Campylobacter Infections clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Campylobacter Infections.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT02067676 Completed - Clinical trials for Campylobacter Infection

Safety Study of a Capsule-Conjugate Vaccine to Prevent Campylobacter-Caused Diarrhea

CJCV1-01
Start date: April 21, 2014
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to assess the safety of increasing doses of a potential vaccine against Campylobacter with and without Alhydrogel®, an aluminum hydroxide adjuvant. This study will also assess immune responses induced by the vaccine.

NCT ID: NCT02040922 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Irritable Bowel Syndrome

Campylobacter Enteritis and Post-Infective Bowel Dysfunction (PI-BD): Role of Antibiotics and Microbiota

CERAMIC
Start date: January 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The principal research objective is to determine the impact of antibiotic use on the risk of developing long term bowel symptoms after infection with the germ Campylobacter.

NCT ID: NCT01048112 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Campylobacter Infections

Campylobacter Jejuni Challenge Model Development: Assessment of Homologous Protection

Start date: January 2010
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this research is to continue to develop a model of infection with Campylobacter jejuni, a bacterium that causes food and water-borne disease (mainly diarrhea). The objectives are to 1) determine if healthy subjects develop short-term (<6 month) protection to reinfection with C. jejuni; and 2) characterize the immune responses to C. jejuni infection. Information obtained will be used in development of a vaccine against Campylobacter infections. Volunteers will be screened for eligibility within 60 days prior to enrollment. Screening will include obtaining informed consent prior to any study procedure. This will be followed by medical history, physical examination, review of current medications, blood samples for safety labs (WBC, Hct, Hgb, platelet count; chemistry panel; screening for HIV, HLA-B27, HBV, and HCV); urine pregnancy testing for females. Stool will be tested for infection. Eligible volunteers will be enrolled in the study and admitted to the GCRC on Day -1. They will drink a measured dose of C. jejuni on Day 0, and followed for approximately 9 inpatient days, during which time the investigators expect at least 75% to develop a diarrheal illness, which will be promptly treated with replacement fluids (oral or IV, as indicated) and antibiotics. During the inpatient period, subjects will be assessed for any adverse events, and blood and stool specimens will be analyzed for markers of infection and markers of immune response. Subjects must have resolved or resolving symptoms and two negative stool cultures ≥12 hours apart to be eligible for discharge, and will be seen in outpatient follow-up at 21, 28, 35, 60, and 90 days for additional AE assessments and blood and stool analysis. Eight subjects will return for redosing approximately 98 days after the initial dose, with the same inpatient and outpatient follow-up as above. Few or none should develop a diarrheal illness. Four naïve (previously unexposed) subjects will also receive the dose on Day 98 to confirm a 75% illness rate with this dose. They will be followed as the initial group was. All participants will be assessed by phone 6 months after the final dose they received.

NCT ID: NCT00859716 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Campylobacter Infection

ACE393-103 Vaccination Challenge Study

ACE393-103VC
Start date: October 2008
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether ACE393 vaccination can protect against Campylobacteriosis in a challenge model.

NCT ID: NCT00434798 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Campylobacter Infections

Campylobacter Jejuni Challenge Model Development: Dose Ranging Study

Start date: February 2007
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The primary objective of this study is to establish a human Campylobacter jejuni infection model with the following characteristics: 1. Safe application 1. Infectious period risk mitigated by close monitoring and prospectively applied early treatment criteria 2. Potential post-infectious sequelae risk mitigated by appropriate strain and host selection 2. Campylobacteriosis attack rate of at least 75% Secondary objectives are to determine humoral, cell-mediated, and mucosal immune responses in the newly established human C. jejuni infection model and evaluate short-term (< 3 mo) protection upon repeat exposure to homologous C. jejuni strain and assess immune responses associated with protection.