View clinical trials related to Clostridium Difficile Infection.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to compare number of vegetative cells and spores in stool over time for fidaxomicin or vancomycin in patients diagnosed with their first episode of C. difficile infection.
Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is the reconstitution of normal flora by a "stool transplant" from a healthy individual to a C. difficile-infected recipient, and has long been a successful approach to recurrent/refractory C. difficile. The purpose of this project is to generate a frozen FMT inoculum from well-screened healthy volunteer donors which can be used repeatedly, particularly in those who do not have a healthy intimate partner or other related donor. Delivery of FMT has been performed colonoscopically, by fecal retention enema, or by the nasogastric route. This study will evaluate the safety and secondarily the efficacy of a frozen inoculum administered by nasogastric tube vs administered by colonoscope. Subjects with recurrent/relapsing C. difficile infection (10 per group) will receive FMT via either: - colonoscopy - NGT The primary endpoint is assessment of safety as measured by clinical events (GI, procedural, systemic). Efficacy will be defined as a resolution of diarrhea off antibiotics for C. difficile, in the absence of a need for OTHER systemic antibiotics, i.e. resumption of a normal bowel status for the individual. Secondary efficacy endpoints include weight, subjective well-being and relative clinical improvement per standardized questionnaire, and subject qualitative assessment of, and satisfaction with, the transplant procedures. Subjects will be monitored for clinical safety by history and standard exams and the follow-up questionnaire as well as followed closely by phone and in person.
Clostridium difficile associated diarrhoea is an important cause of morbidity in patients treated with antibiotics, especially in hospital. Clinical relapse occurs after up to 30% of initially successful treatments for colitis. Preliminary reports suggest that Rifaximin, a poorly absorbed antibiotic used to treat travellers diarrhoea can prevent relapse. We plan to carry out a randomised placebo controlled trial to test the hypothesis that Rifaximin given in a reducing dose over 4 weeks after successful treatment will reduce the relapse rate.
A total of 608 participants with Clostridium Difficile Associated Diarrhea (CDAD) will participate in this study; participants will receive either oral vancomycin or CB-183,315 in a blinded fashion. Treatment will last for 10 days and participants will be followed up for at least 40 days and a maximum of 100 days. The purpose of this study is to evaluate how well CB-183,315 treats CDAD as compared to vancomycin.
606 participants with Clostridium Difficile Associated Diarrhea (CDAD) participated in this study and received either oral vancomycin or CB-183,315 (surotomycin) in a blinded fashion. Treatment lasted for 10 days and participants were followed up for at least 40 days and a maximum of 100 days. The purpose of this study was to evaluate how well surotomycin treats CDAD as compared to vancomycin.
Clostridium difficile is an important pathogen, causing disease that ranges from mild self-limited diarrhea to life-threatening pseudomembranous colitis. It is estimated that C. difficile is responsible for 10% to 25% of all cases of antibiotic-associated diarrhea and for almost all cases of pseudomembranous colitis. C. difficile disease is mediated by two large toxins, A and B. The toxins damage intestinal epithelial cells and cause the clinical illness. Primary risk factors for C. difficile clinically apparent infection include antimicrobial therapy, hospitalization, residence in a long-term care facility, older age (≥ 65 years), and increased length of hospital stay. The incidence of CDI both in the hospital and the community is important in the understanding and characterization of the disease and its prevention. This observational, epidemiological study will advance the investigators understanding of CDI risk factors in several hospitals and possibly the community in the Asia Pacific region.
The purpose of this research study is to evaluate the effectiveness of an antibiotic called fidaxomicin in preventing C. difficile infection.
MK-3415A is the combination of monoclonal antibodies to Clostridium (C.) difficile toxin A (MK-3415) and toxin B (MK-6072). This study will investigate whether: 1) treatment with MK-6072 or MK-3415A in addition to standard of care (SOC) antibiotic therapy will decrease Clostridium Difficile Infection (CDI) recurrence compared with placebo; and 2) MK-6072 and MK-3415A will be generally well tolerated in participants receiving SOC therapy for CDI compared with placebo.
The goal of this study is to determine the outcome of patients with recurrent CDI treated with fresh FMT versus frozen-and-thawed FMT in a randomized controlled trial. The specific objectives are to evaluate the safety of both types of FMT and to compare the clinical response, treatment failure and relapse rate in patients treated with fresh FMT compared to those treated with frozen-and-thawed FMT; also to assess the functional health and well-being of patients in each arm using a validated tool. The metagenomics will also be conducted from the stool samples collected from select patients from each arm: pre and post treatment and the matching donors. The metagenomics data will be used to determine the bacteria which may have contributed to the cure of CDI.
CDI (Clostridium difficile infection) causes diarrheal illness and can cause colitis which may be fatal. A patient being treated for CDI has a 10-25% chance of developing relapse. Recurrent CDI is on the rise. There are few options available to treat recurrent CDI. "Stool transplant" (infusing donor stool into the intestine of the recipient), is not very palatable to either patient or medical personnel. The investigators will isolate intestinal bacteria from donor stool and use this purified mixture of donor bacteria instead of stool transplant. The investigators hypothesize that this cleaner mixture of purely isolated intestinal bacteria from a healthy donor would be equally effective as conventional fecal bacteriotherapy, which uses donor stool. The use of this prepared mixture of aerobic and anaerobic organisms, or probiotic approach, is based on the same principle of fecal flora reconstitution. However our approach would provide a more controlled, reproducible, cleaner and more aesthetically acceptable method of administration, and from a patient safety perspective, would also be a safer strategy than using freshly defecated donor fecal matter.