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Endocarditis Infective clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05791357 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Endocarditis Infective

The Role of Polymerase Chain Reaction in the Management of Patients With Infective Endocarditis

Start date: April 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to prospectively investigate the additional diagnostic value of broad range PCR targeting the 16 ribosomal DNA in diagnosis and management of patients with infective endocarditis who are candidate for surgicaltherapy;

NCT ID: NCT05061355 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Endocarditis Infective

Antibiotics vs Antibiotics and Surgical ThERapy for Infective Endocarditis

ASTERIx
Start date: September 9, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Infective endocarditis (IE) is a deadly disease and the incidence is increasing. An important initial assessment of patients with IE includes whether surgical treatment is indicated; yet, appropriate data to guide this assessment do not exist. The ASTERIx study will assess whether a surgical approach in addition to medical care for treatment of IE is superior to medical care alone. In total, 496 patients will be included in the study over four years. The study is event-driven and will require at least 240 events. The study will assess the primary composite outcome of death, embolization, relapse of IE, new heart failure or reinfection. Study participants who survive to discharge will be followed by routine clinical check-ups at one- and four-weeks post-discharge and at three months. Additionally a 12-month study follow-up is planned. The investigators will also conduct a small substudy to assess the frequency of silent emboli.

NCT ID: NCT03211975 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Endocarditis Infective

Study of the Prognosis of Infectious Endocarditis (EPEI)

EPEI
Start date: February 27, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Infectious endocarditis (IE) is the localization and proliferation of blood-borne germs in the endocardium. It remains a complicated disease to manage due to its low incidence, diagnostic difficulties, the change in epidemiology in recent decades and high mortality rates. The annual incidence is estimated at 3-10 cases per 100,000 people. The epidemiology of AR has changed significantly in recent years due to new risk factors. Indeed, the frequency of rheumatic heart disease, which was the first predisposing factor, decreased markedly in the industrialized countries, replaced by new predisposing factors: the presence of valvular prostheses or intracardiac materials (the risk of AR is multiplied by 50 Compared with the general population), hemodialysis, nosocomial infections, immunosuppression, increased use of injectable treatments and, above all, an aging population with an increase in degenerative diseases such as aortic stenosis and l Mitral insufficiency. The diagnosis of IA is based on DUKE criteria. But the clinical presentation is sometimes atypical especially in case of infection on prosthesis where the diagnosis is based mainly on the results of the blood cultures and the ultrasound data. The lesions visualized in ultrasound are: vegetations, abscesses, pseudo-aneurysms and fistulas constituting the degenerated abscess evolution, the perforation of the cusps of the native valve or the bioprosthesis giving rise to a jet of Eccentric regurgitation. The evolution of endocarditis and its prognosis vary according to many factors: the type of germ responsible, the precocity of the diagnosis, the existence of a complication, the site of occurrence. These complications of endocarditis are frequent, sometimes revealing. EI is complicated by heart failure, atrioventricular conduction disorders, peri-vascular abscesses, embolic, neurological, renal and septic complications. Despite improvements in diagnosis and therapeutic methods, diagnosis is sometimes difficult, management remains very complicated and morbidity and mortality remain high. Studies are still needed to study the prognosis and to determine the predictive factors for hospital mortality and long-term mortality.