View clinical trials related to Dengue.
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This study aims to determine the efficacy of montelukast in reducing the incidence of dengue warning signs in adult dengue patients.
The investigators hypothesize that sex, age, area of exposure and purpose of travel are associated with different travel-related infections. The investigators also hypothesize that certain infections will have long-term sequelae. Health-data will be collected from travellers from Switzerland and Europe. The project starts with a pilot study for 50 travellers, followed by the recruiting of 10,000 travellers. The data collection will be via a mobile App (ITIT). The ITIT App will collect active data from travellers. The participants will download the App after signing an electronic consent form and completing a baseline questionnaire. Then the travellers will answer a short daily questionnaire about illness symptoms during travel. The ITIT App will also collect passive data (GPS localisation, environmental and weather data). The project will provide real-time data on travel-related infections and profile travel illness by age, sex and purpose of travel and also identify outbreaks.
Arboviruses, diseases transmitted to humans by the bite of an insect vector, are a major public health problem, particularly in tropical and sub-tropical countries. In New Caledonia, dengue epidemics are recurrent and may be associated with the co-circulation of other arboviruses such as Zika or chikungunya. The virological determinants which condition the occurrence of these epidemics may be linked to an increased vectorial competence of the vector mosquito Aedes aegypti for a particular viral isolate. In fact, the Aedes aegypti mosquito is infected by making a blood meal on a person infected with an arbovirus. The virus infects its digestive tract, then spreads throughout the mosquito's body until it reaches its salivary glands. The virus is then present in the saliva and will be injected into the human host during a new blood meal. Some viral variants are best transmitted by Aedes aegypti. In general, the study of this vectorial competence is carried out by experiments in the laboratory during which an artificial blood meal composed of mammalian blood (human, rabbit, etc.) is mixed with a viral stock. Carrying out deported blood meals during which blood collected from patients infected with an arbovirus is used to gorge mosquitoes makes it possible to place oneself in experimental conditions as close as possible to the natural cycle of transmission of arboviruses. In the human host, cells of the myeloid lineage present in the peripheral blood constitute preferred targets of replication for arboviruses. At the same time, the peripheral blood cells of patients are activated in response to infection and secrete many soluble factors released into the blood of patients. The study of blood samples from patients infected with arboviruses is therefore of prime importance for understanding both the replicative mechanisms of arboviruses but also the immune response they induce.
Arboviruses, diseases transmitted to humans by the bite of an insect vector, are a major public health problem, especially in tropical and sub-tropical countries. A promising strategy aimed at blocking the circulation of arboviruses is to release Aedes aegypti mosquitoes carrying the endosymbiotic bacterium Wolbachia. In 2019, the Wolbachia strategy was implemented in Nouméa as part of the World Mosquito Program. This intervention will modify the epidemiological profile of arboviruses in New Caledonia. Epidemiological surveillance of arboviruses requires molecular characterization of the virus contained in the serum obtained from the blood collected from patients. This molecular characterization by RNA isolation techniques, RT-qPCR monitoring and sequencing allows the construction of phylogenetic trees. In the context of the implementation of the World Mosquito Program in Nouméa, the investigators plan to follow the molecular evolution of arboviruses, over the period preceding the releases of mosquitoes carrying Wolbachia (from 1995 to 2019) then over a period of 5 years. following the releases. At the same time, the virus can be isolated by cell culture techniques and in vitro infections, allowing its study in vitro in cells or in vivo in mosquitoes. This study allows us to measure the impact of the Wolbachia strategy on the evolution of the virus's ability to replicate in cells in the presence of Wolbachia and to be transmitted by the mosquito.
ZAP-DENGUE is a pilot randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled evaluation of the safety and efficacy of five days of intravenous zanamivir treatment to treat vascular permeability syndrome which is the main cause of death in dengue fever.
The Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) guideline has been implemented in Burkina Faso and is used across primary health facilities to assess children under the age of 5 years. A part from a rapid diagnostic test (RDT) for malaria, no other point of care in vitro diagnostic tests are widely used to improve disease diagnosis and inform treatment decisions. Dengue fever has been reported in Burkina Faso since 1925 and the recent epidemics in 2016 and 2017 have prompted the government to validate and deploy a clinical management algorithm for Dengue and a case reporting process to support surveillance for a targeted response. The organisation Terre des hommes has digitalised IMCI and implemented the module through its Integrated electronic Diagnosis Approach (IeDA) programme across primary health care centers (PHCs) in the country with proven impact on clinical care and proven reduction in antibiotic prescriptions. Many recognize the need to update the IMCI guideline with current evidence. However this is challenging and may require large clinical trials. The advantage of electronic clinical decision support systems is plural: they improve quality of care through increased adherence and feedback information to the system; they strengthen surveillance systems by connecting relevant patient related data and provide geo-tagged coordinates for targeted responses; and they can become evidence-adaptive. An electronic module of the Burkina Faso Dengue clinical management guideline accompanied with dengue rapid diagnostic tests has the potential to improve the diagnosis of non-malaria fevers in particular during "dengue seasons" and improve the efficiency of surveillance for this disease. In this study, the investigators aim to assess the usability and the performance of the dengue module for patient management in primary health care facilities.
This is a cluster randomized controlled trial (CRCT) to evaluate the efficacy of Wolbachia-infected A. aegypti mosquito releases in reducing the burden of ARBV infection in Brazil over four years. The intervention will be the release of Wolbachia-infected A. aegypti mosquitoes. Standard control measures routinely established by the Belo Horizonte City Hall as recommended by the PNCD, will continue to be performed by the Belo Horizonte Health Department (Zoonoses Management) in all clusters, that is, the standard control measures will be carried out throughout the city of Belo Horizonte, independent of this clinical study. Wolbachia-infected A. aegypti will be deployed by releasing adult mosquitoes in pre-determined, thoroughly spaced release points in easily accessible roads described in a release map. A release map will be generated for each cluster and the numbers of release points will be determined by population density, surface area and mosquito abundance. Wolbachia-infected A. aegypti mosquitoes will be deployed across intervention clusters in two stages: 1) a 4 month establishment stage in which most of the releases will occur and 2) followed by an 8 month consolidation stage in which the abundance of Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes will be measured and remedial deployments will be completed, if needed, with the aim of achieving a high prevalence of Wolbachia amongst A. aegypti mosquitoes in intervention clusters within 12 months from the start of the release. The goal is to reach a Wolbachia prevalence of 60% or higher. Monitoring of Wolbachia prevalence in the cluster will continue throughout the study period, but no further mosquito deployments will occur after the consolidation stage is complete. The primary objective is to evaluate whether release of Wolbachia-infected Aedes aegypti mosquitoes plus standard Aedes vector control measures reduces the sero-incidence of ARBV infection compared to standard Aedes vector control measures alone.
The purpose of this study is to assess the antiviral activity of JNJ-64281802 versus placebo in terms of reduction of dengue virus 1 (DENV-1) ribonucleic acid (RNA) viral load (VL).
The characteristics of the humoral response directed against mosquito saliva antigens are not known precisely. This is a major limitation for using immunological markers as an outcome in epidemiological trials and as an indicator for operational deployment of interventions. Recent advances in the assembly of the genome of some Anopheles and Aedes mosquito vector species has facilitated the identification of new candidate peptides in silico, using the sequences of orthologous salivary gland proteins and B-cell prediction algorithms. The objective of this study is to assess the humoral immune response directed against candidate peptides following controlled exposure to laboratory-adapted colonies of An. minimus, An. maculatus and An. dirus, Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus. This research will provide essential information to identify and validate immunological markers of human exposure to malaria and dengue mosquito vectors in Southeast Asia. Immunological markers would be useful to understand transmission dynamics and predict the risk of transmission as part of a surveillance system, and to assess the efficacy of vector-control interventions in entomological trials or during operational deployment of interventions in the region.