View clinical trials related to Community-Acquired Pneumonia.
Filter by:The present study is designed to investigate the beneficial effects of adjunctive dexamethasone therapy in patients admitted with community-acquired pneumonia, additionally aiming at assessing what patients benefit from dexamethasone treatment mostly. A large multicenter study will be conducted comparing a 4 days dexamethasone 6 mg per os course with placebo in 600 patients and with predefined subgroup analyses planned.
CLINPCT study is a prospective, randomized, controlled, open intervention clinical trial including adult patients admitted in the emergency department with community-acquired pneumonia. The objective of this clinical trial is to compare two strategies: clinical reassessment and procalcitonin guided diagnostic and therapeutic strategy in patients with community-acquired pneumonia. In the clinical reassessment arm, antibiotherapy is systematically started in the emergency department. The continuation, the discontinuation or the modification of the antibiotherapy initially prescribed in the ED were made at Day 1 and Day 5 based on clinical assessment. On Day 1, the aim of the clinical reassessment is diagnosis reassessment: to confirm or not the diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia and to confirm or not the antibiotherapy. On Day 5, the aim of the clinical reassessment is to evaluate the possibility to stop the current antibiotherapy based on criteria for clinical stability defined by the Infectious Diseases Society of America (Temperature ≤37.8°C, Heart rate ≤100 beats/min, Respiratory rate ≤24 breaths/min, Systolic blood pressure ≥90 mm Hg, Arterial oxygen saturation ≥90% or pO2 ≥60 mm Hg on room air). In the procalcitonin arm, initiation and discontinuation of the antibiotherapy is based on the antibiotic stewardship based on procalcitonin (PCT) cut-off ranges previously published. Re-evaluation of the clinical status and measurement of serum PCT levels is mandatory after 6-24 h in all persistently sick and hospitalized patients in who antibiotic are withheld. The PCT algorithm can be overruled by pre-specified criteria, e.g. in patients with immediately life-threatening disease. If the algorithm is overruled and antibiotics are given, an early discontinuation of antibiotic therapy after 3, 5 or 7 days is more or less endorsed based on PCT levels. In hospitalized patients with ongoing antibiotic therapy PCT levels are reassessed on days 3, 5 and 7 and antibiotics will be discontinued using the PCT cut-offs defined above.
I. To investigate time measurement from emergency room admission to first antibiotic administration. II. To evaluate risk factors for prolonged time to first antibiotic administration. III. To correlate time measurement with Charlson comorbidity index and multimorbidity patterns. IV. To investigate the impact of a delayed time to first antibiotic administration on the outcome
To collect the efficacy and safety information of Azithromycin IV related to their appropriate use in daily practice
This is a prospective interventional study to assess laboratory testing which will identify the microbial cause of pneumonia. This, in turn, will allow targeted antimicrobial agent selection for patients with community acquired-pneumonia (CAP). Hypothesis: 1) To determine if Targeted strategy is non-inferior to Empiric therapy with respect to outcome endpoints. 2) To assess the use of innovative POC tests allows targeted narrow-spectrum antimicrobial therapy. 3) To determine if Targeted strategy is superior to Empiric therapy in patients with viral pneumonia
The duration of antibiotic treatment in community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) lasts about 9-10 days, and is determined empirically. The last North American guideline for CAP recommends using clinical stability criteria as a reference to establish the duration of antibiotic treatment, which would result in about 5 days of antibiotic use for the majority of pneumonia cases. In order to validate this proposal we propose to carry out a randomized multicenter double-blind (until the 5th day) clinical trial with adult CAP patients admitted to 4 hospitals in Euskadi. A control group (with routine treatment) will be compared with an intervention group (antibiotic treatment for at least 5 days, which will be interrupted if temperature is =< 37,8ºC for at least 48 hours and no more than one sign of clinical instability is assessed), with regards to: mortality at 15 days, clinical recovery by days 10 and 30, clinical improvement after days 5 and 10 as evaluated by PRO scales, duration of antibiotic treatment. A non-inferiority dichotomous sequential analysis will be performed (for mortality after 15 days, clinical recovery by day 10 and in follow-up at 30 days, clinical improvement after days 5 and 10, with PRO scales) as well as a superiority analysis for the duration of the antibiotic treatment. A total of 1100 patients will be recruited, following their signed consent, during the inclusion period (18 months). Stability criteria will be measured daily. The rest of the variables will be measured at admission and by telephone on days 10 and 30.
The purpose of this study is to compare the cost(effectiveness) of three existing antibiotic strategies for patients with community-acquired pneumonia admitted to the hospital, but not the ICU.
The objective is to assess the effect of simvastatin on immunology, inflammatory, and coagulation responses, and mortality in elderly with pneumonia based. The primary outcome is mortality event. The hypothesis of this study is that simvastatin therapy will reduce mortality in elderly with pneumonia.
The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy of addition of corticosteroid therapy to antibiotics in children hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia. The hypothesis is that the use of corticosteroids decreases the length of stay in children hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia.
Primary objective : to estimate impact of CT-scan on diagnostic for emergency department (ED) patients with suspected Community-acquired Pneumonia (CAP). Secondary objective: to estimate impact of CT-scan on treatment (antimicrobial therapy) and site of care for ED patients with suspected CAP.