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Endocarditis, Bacterial clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04647331 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Infective Endocarditis

Betalactam Pharmacokinetics in Endocarditis Patients

Start date: June 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Infectious endocarditis (IE) is associated with mortality rates of 10-12%. Adequate antibiotic therapy is crucial for survival and is administered in high doses due to the severity of the disease. In most cases, beta-lactam antibiotics (e.g. ampicillin, penicillin G, cefotaxime or cloxacillin) are employed. A number of patient characteristics, such as age, body weight, and renal function) influence the pharmacokinetics of these drugs. Yet, the interindividual variability is poorly understood meaning that a large proportion of patients are at risk of subtherapeutic or excessive drug concentrations that might result in treatment failure or side effects, respectively. In the present study, data will be collected on antibiotic concentrations in patients treated with beta-lactams for infectious endocarditis as well as patient characteristics and treatment outcomes. A mathematical model will be developed to determine which patient factors determine drug pharmacokinetics. Based on this model, predictions will be made by mathematical simulations on which dosing regimens are optimal for individual patients to ensure therapeutic and non-toxic drug concentrations. In total, 150 patients will be included at four University Hospitals in Sweden; Uppsala University Hospital, Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg, Skåne University Hospital in Lund and Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm. Following informed consent to participate blood samples will be collected at 6 time-points during a dose interval and then at 3 time-points weekly during the full treatment episode (maximum 6 weeks).

NCT ID: NCT04544306 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Infective Endocarditis

Partial Oral Antimicrobials to Treat Infective Endocarditis in People Who Inject Drugs

Start date: June 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Infective endocarditis (IE) is a serious infection associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Recent studies demonstrated an increased risk of infective endocarditis in people who inject drugs (PWIDs). PWIDs have a high rate of non-compliance with hospital admissions and leaving against medical advice. A recent landmark randomized controlled trial demonstrated similar outcomes when comparing partial oral antimicrobial therapy to continued intravenous antimicrobial therapy in the general population. Performing a trial to explore the non-inferiority of oral compared to intravenous antimicrobial therapy in PWIDs is essential in advancing patient care in this high risk increasing population.

NCT ID: NCT04257292 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Infective Endocarditis

NExt-Generation Sequencing and Cell Culture-based Characterization of S. Aureus in Infective Endocarditis

NESSIE
Start date: September 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Infective endocarditis is a deadly disease with a mortality rate between 20 and 40%. Antibiotic therapy is of utmost importance. It is primarily guided by microbial results from positive blood culture. However, culture-based microbiological diagnostic can identify the species, but not the strain or the genotypic characteristics of a pathogen. Identifying the strain can be of utmost clinical significance. S. aureus is the most common causative organism of IE worldwide (16%-32%). This pathogen causes massive valve destruction and abscesses, which is strongly dependent on the expression of virulence factors that vary between different S. aureus strains. Functional characterization of S. aureus and determination of virulence factors can currently be achieved through cell culture-based assays (CCBA). However, these tests are very time consuming and cannot be performed as routine clinical diagnostics. Next Generation Sequencing (NSG) has the potential to identify the genotypic characteristics of the pathogen, which is important to determine its virulent potential. The aim of this study is to evaluate the possible utilization of NGS in the prediction of virulence factors of S. aureus and to compare it to the virulence factors determined using CCBA. Hopefully, by comparing the NGS and CCBA, the investigators will get a faster way of determining the possible virulence factors. The NGS method can be further utilized to describe the prevalence of different strains of bacteria in infected valve tissue and blood culture samples. The collected data will serve as a basis for further evaluation of the potentials of NGS-based Diagnosis of IE, as well as a comparison between NGS-guided antibiotic treatment and the standard of care antibiotic treatment.

NCT ID: NCT04222257 Terminated - Clinical trials for Endocarditis, Bacterial

Short-course Antibiotic Treatment in Gram-positive Cocci Infective Endocarditis

SATIE
Start date: January 26, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Background: it is well known that most serious complications of infective endocarditis (IE) appear in the so-called "critical phase" of the disease, which are the first days after diagnosis. Subsequently, the vast majority of patients who overcome this acute phase has a favourable evolution, and usually stay in the hospital for a long time only to complete antibiotic therapy. In stable patients with adequate response to antibiotic treatment, without signs of persistent infection or metastatic foci such as spondylodiscitis, it is likely that a shorter antibiotic regimen would be an efficient and safe alternative, as has already been confirmed in patients with IE on tricuspid valves caused by a microorganism considered virulent such as S. aureus. This attractive alternative would improve patients' quality of life, save costs, and decrease the risk of complications related to the adverse effects of prolonged antibiotic treatment. Objectives: to compare the incidence of the composite endpoint of all-cause mortality, unplanned cardiac surgery, symptomatic embolisms and relapses within 6 months after the inclusion between patients with IE caused by gram-positive cocci receiving a short-course of 2 weeks of antibiotic therapy and those patients receiving conventional antibiotic therapy (4-6 weeks). Methodology: multicenter, prospective, randomized, controlled open-label, phase IV clinical trial. Sample: patients with IE caused by gram-positive cocci, having received at least 10 days of conventional antibiotic treatment, and at least 7 days after surgery when indicated, without clinical, analytical, microbiological or echocardiographic signs of persistent infection. Estimated sample size: 298 patients. Intervention: Control group: standard antibiotic therapy, according to ESC guidelines recommendations, for 4 to 6 weeks. Experimental group: short-course antibiotic therapy for 2 weeks. The prevalence of previously known risk factors for adverse events will be compared between the two groups to confirm that randomization have worked properly. The incidence of the composite endpoint of all-cause mortality, unplanned cardiac surgery, symptomatic embolisms and relapses within 6 months after the inclusion in the study will be prospectively registered and compared.

NCT ID: NCT04178915 Enrolling by invitation - Sepsis Clinical Trials

Study of Leukocyte Immunophenotype and the Lipid Transport System as Predictive Biomarkers of Severe Bacterial Infections

Start date: July 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Current study evaluates the relationship between cell immunity and lipid transport systems in patients with severe bacterial infections (on the model of pneumonia, infective endocarditis, sepsis) in order to develop new methods for predicting the course and outcome of severe bacterial infections.

NCT ID: NCT03979261 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Infective Endocarditis

Predisposition to Infectious Endocarditis

Start date: July 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To evaluate the gender-related elements, a first step will be to analyze the impact of sex ratio on different parameters such as age in endocarditis and the type of underlying valvulopathy and other associated comorbidities.

NCT ID: NCT03961503 Completed - Clinical trials for Surgical Site Infection

Retrospective Analysis of Nephrotoxicity During Daptomycin Versus Vancomycin Treatments in High Risk Patients

DVN
Start date: January 1, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a frequent complication that occurs in 15 to 25% of patients after vascular surgery, and up to 40% of patients after cardiac surgery. AKI compromises seriously short and long-term prognosis of critically ill patients. Several AKI risk factors have been identified including a chronic pathology of the patient such as kidney failure or diabetes, acute kidney injury related to hemodynamic disorders during surgery, including cardiopulmonary bypass, or sepsis, and the use of nephrotoxic agents such as some antibiotics, colloids or iodine contrast agents. Avoiding nephrotoxic agents is therefore strongly recommended in ICU patients, to reduce the incidence of AKI, or to reduce its severity. The aim of this cohort study was to assess whether the use of daptomycin, was associated to a lower incidence of AKI than vancomycin in cardiovascular ICU patients, with similar efficacy. This is a retrospective observational study with a propensity score adjustment to reduce the bias of selection for a comparative analysis between two antibacterial treatments used in routine care. Since treatments were not randomized, the investigators used the propensity score method for primary endpoint analysis. For this, the investigators included the covariates potentially related to treatment and outcome in a multivariate logistic model explaining the choice of treatment. This propensity score was used in the second model as an adjustment covariate included in the multivariate analysis to determine factors independently associated with the primary endpoint (AKI within 7 days). The main hypothesis is the first line antibiotic treatment with daptomycin leads to less nephrotoxicity than vancomycin in a population known at high risk for AKI and with at least a similar efficacy on clinical success rate.

NCT ID: NCT03945708 Completed - Clinical trials for Infective Endocarditis

Does Whole Blood Adsorber During CPB Reduce Vasoactive Drugs Postoperatively in Endocarditis Patients Undergoing Valve Surgery?

Start date: May 15, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study aims to investigate the effect of addition of an adsorber during cardio pulmonary bypassin patients with infective endocarditis undergoing valve surgery, and if it will decrease the use of vasoactive drugs postoperatively.

NCT ID: NCT03892174 Recruiting - Sepsis Clinical Trials

Cytokine REmoval in CRitically Ill pAtients Requiring Surgical Therapy for Infective Endocarditis (RECReATE)

RECREATE
Start date: November 14, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Infectious endocarditis (IE) and other severe infections are well-known to induce significant changes in the immune response including immune functionality in a considerable number of affected patients. In fact, numerous patients with IE develop a persistent functional immunological phenotype that can best be characterized by a profound anti-inflammation and/or functional anergy. This was previously referred to as "injury-associated immunosuppression (IAI)" by Pfortmüller et al., published in Intensive Care Medicine Experimental 2017. IAI can be assessed by measurement of cellular (functional) markers. Persistence of IAI is associated with prolonged ICU length of stay, increased secondary infection rates, and death. Immunomodulation to reverse IAI was shown beneficial in immunostimulatory (randomized controlled) clinical trials. CytoSorb® treatment is currently used as standard of care in some institutions in surgically treated IE patients. The investigators aim to investigate two accepted treatment protocols and aim to explore whether adsorption with a cytokine adsorption filter can increase immune competence in treated individuals.

NCT ID: NCT03768180 Completed - Clinical trials for Infective Endocarditis of Aortic Valve

Infective Endocarditis After TAVR

INTENSE
Start date: January 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims at studying the frequency of infective endocarditis after transcatheter aortic valve replacement/implantation