View clinical trials related to Endocarditis, Bacterial.
Filter by: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.
The purpose of the EARLY study is to evaluate the efficacy and effectiveness of early surgery in patients with Infective Endocarditis (IE).
This study will compare dalbavancin to standard of care (SOC) antibiotic therapy for the completion of therapy in patients with complicated bacteremia or infective endocarditis.
The overall goals of this study are to compare the safety and efficacy of daptomycin monotherapy 10 mg/kg/day and vancomycin monotherapy dosed to achieve vancomycin trough levels of 15 to 20 μg/mL for the treatment of methicillin-resistant S. aureus bacteremia (MRSA), including right-sided infective endocarditis (RIE).
multicenter, randomized, double blind study to describe the safety and efficacy of daptomycin (6 mg/kg q24h) with and without concomitant initial gentamicin combination therapy in the treatment of SAIE
The aim of this study is to determine the safety and efficacy of daptomycin when used as an adjuvant agent to standard care in the treatment of proven native valve Enterococcal endocarditis. Patients with this disease will be offered the option of receiving daptomycin at a dose of 8 milligrams/kilogram/day in addition to the antibiotics they are already receiving. The hypothesis of this study is that daptomycin added to standard therapy for Enterococcal endocarditis is safe and efficacious. Patients who receive daptomycin + standard therapy will be compared to patients who receive standard therapy alone with respect to the following outcomes: 1. Safety. 1. The frequency of any Grade 3 or 4 toxicity (DAIDS scale) will be measured. 2. The frequency of muscle toxicity or renal toxicity, as determined by predefined criteria. 2. Efficacy. 1. Clinical efficacy. - Time to clearance of bacteremia - Cure at 6 weeks following completion of antibiotic therapy - Mortality at 6 weeks following completion of antibiotic therapy 2. Microbiologic efficacy. - Peak and trough serum bactericidal titers - The minimum bactericidal concentration of Enterococci to daptomycin We expect to enroll 40 patients over 2 years.