View clinical trials related to Community-Acquired Pneumonia.
Filter by:The hypothesis for this trial is that an antibiotic strategy for the management of non-severe community-acquired alveolar pneumonia in children aged 3 to 59 months, including amoxicillin 80-100 mg/kg/day for at least 3 days in case of rapid response and 5 days in case of delayed response, would not be inferior to current French recommendations (antibiotic therapy for 5 days in case of rapid response and 7 days in case of delayed response) in terms of treatment of failure rate at 7 days.
This is the matched 1:2 case-control study, prospectively collect case and control who are diagnosed with pneumococcal or non-pneumococcal community acquired pneumonia (CAP), accordingly from November 2023 through October 2024. The investigators define a CASE as a person aged ≥60 years due to pneumococcal confirmed CAP either in-patients or out-patients by doctor in charge. While a CONTROL is defined as a person aged ≥60 years due to non-pneumococcal confirmed CAP either in-patients or out-patients by doctor in charge. The goal of this observational study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13) in pneumococcal CAP in Thai adults aged ≥ 60 years with or without any medical conditions. The main questions it aims to answer is: • What are the effectiveness of PCV13 for preventing all typed, vaccine typed, or non-vaccine typed of pneumococcal CAP among Thai older adults? The investigators retrospectively collect cases and control who are diagnosed with CAP accordingly from January 2012 through October 2023. The investigators define case and control the same as prospective method, but all data were retrieved from archive database. -The investigators select a 1:2 matched control with criteria as follows; 10-year-interval of age, ward (the same patient care such as out or in-patient, or admitted in the same level ward). Participants will be - collated from hospital database regarding their CAP illnesses by pneumococcal and non-pneumococcal pneumonia condition. - explored their vaccine status by either vaccine book checking or hospital database. Researcher will compare the effectiveness of PCV13 to prevent all typed, vaccine typed and non-vaccine typed pneumococcal pneumonia.
To evaluate novel microbiological techniques for enhanced Pathogen Identification, assess the speed and efficiency of the integrated approach in providing timely diagnostic results, aiming to reduce the turnaround time for CAP diagnosis and subsequently improve patient outcomes and evaluate the clinical impact of enhanced precision in CAP diagnosis on treatment decisions, including the potential for targeted and more effective antimicrobial therapy based on accurate pathogen identification.
Reduce inappropriate antibiotic use is a priority of public health agencies. Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is one of the most important indications for antibiotic prescriptions. In the majority of the studies of CAP, there is a large proportion of cases with no pathogen identified. Thus, the choice of the empirical antibiotic depends on the most likely pathogen, individual risk factors, comorbidities, and allergies. Patients aged 65 years or older are often treated with amoxicillin/clavulanate or with another broad-spectrum antibiotic (third-generation cephalosporins, antipneumococcal fluoroquinolone). However, broad-spectrum antibiotic prescription in CAP is debated and concerns exist about side-effects and selective pressure for resistance. Due to lack of head-to-head antibiotic comparisons, a recent Cochrane review concluded that current evidence from Randomized Clinical Trials (RCTs) is insufficient to make evidence-based recommendations for the choice for antibiotic to be used, highlighting an important evidence gap.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of dialectical treatment in the patients with CAP after discharge in a prospective cohort study: one is the Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) cohort, which has been evaluated and has certain effects; The other is a non traditional Chinese medicine queue.
This is a Phase II, multi-center, double-blind, randomized, interventional study in approximately 120 subjects to evaluate clinical benefit of CX-4945 in adult outpatients with SARS-CoV-2 and influenza viral infection-associated pneumonia. The subjects will be recruited into two domains, including SARS-CoV-2 and influenza virus domains. The study will compare the efficacy of Standard of Care (SOC) combined with CX-4945 against SOC paired with a placebo, utilizing a 1:1 allocation ratio in each domain.
1. role of multiplex PCR in early identifying bacteria in patients with lower respiratory tract infection. 2. effect of early starting targeted antibiotics on outcome
The primary purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of Huashibaidu granule for the treatment of community-acquired pneumonia in children compared with placebo and to demonstrate the efficacy of Huashibaidu granule in improving clinical symptoms, removing pathogens, and shortening clinical course.
Correlation between antibiotic resistance and incidence of sepsis in community acquired pneumonia in RICU patients.
This study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of TCM syndrome differentiation treatment on the rehospitalization rate of discharged elderly patients with community acquired pneumonia(CAP)and to explore its mechanism.