Clinical Trials Logo

Endocarditis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Endocarditis.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT03365193 Completed - Clinical trials for Infective Endocarditis

PRetest prObability of Infectious ENDOCARDITIS for Appropriate Criteria Regarding Transesophageal ECHOcardiography in Tertiary Care Facilities (PRO ENDOCARDITIS ECHO-Study)

Start date: December 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Infective endocarditis is a potentially lethal disease that has undergone major changes over the last decades. The Duke Criteria are recommended for evaluation of probability of presence of infective endocarditis by current ESC guidelines. However, since the introduction of Duke criteria in 1994, characteristics of patients presenting with potential infective endocarditis have substantially changed, especially in tertiary care facilities, towards a high proportion of patients with immune deficiency (caused by illness or medically induced), critically ill patients, patients with prosthetic valves and patients with long-lasting intensive care treatment. Likewise, with the increasing interventional therapy of structural heart disease and device implantation in older and multi-morbid patient cohorts, the frequency of endocarditis on prosthetic material and devices increased over the last decades. While Duke criteria overall misclassify a substantial proportion of patients with endocarditis, Duke criteria are difficult to apply in these patients because of lower sensitivity. Therefore, several modifications of the Duke criteria have been proposed. In addition, the uncertainty regarding potential infective endocarditis of treating physicians due to clinical characteristics of their patients leads to an increase in requests for transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography, overcoming echocardiography laboratories. In the present study the investigators aim to identify (I) the precision of the Duke score in predicting presence of infective endocarditis in patients examined at the echocardiography laboratory of the West German Heart Center (II) determine characteristics, not including echocardiography that are associated with increased risk of infective endocarditis, justifying transesophageal echocardiography examination and (III) establish scoring algorithms to help treating physicians to assess the risk of endocarditis in severely diseased patient cohorts prior to echocardiography examinations and to avoid unnecessary echo exams.

NCT ID: NCT03306225 Completed - Clinical trials for Endocarditis, Bacterial

Characterization of Endocarditis to Streptococci and Impact of the CMI on the Future of the Patients

Start date: July 8, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The infectious endocarditis is a grave infection the incidence of which is at present esteemed at 30-100 episodes by million inhabitants a year. This infection is marked with a heavy morbi-mortality.Preliminary studies seem to show an abnormally high death rate at the patients presenting an infectious endocarditis to streptococci with an inhibitive minimal concentration raised to the amoxicilline. The aim of the study is to describe the epidemiology and the clinical presentations of the patients presenting an endocarditis to streptococci

NCT ID: NCT03295045 Completed - Clinical trials for Infective Endocarditis

Evolution of the Profile of Infectious Endocarditis in France in 2008 (EI2008)

EI2008
Start date: December 1, 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Infective endocarditis (IE) is a rare (30 cases / million / year in France) and serious (20 % of deaths during hospitalization) disease . Its epidemiological profile was considerably modified these last years.New predisposing factors appeared, due to increasing number of patients wearing valvular prosthetics. The purpose of this study is to realize in 2008 a new observational study on populational basis to describe and analyze the evolution of the epidemiology of IE in France, compared to previous studies conducted in 1991 and 1999.

NCT ID: NCT03272724 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Infective Endocarditis

French National Observatory on Infective Endocarditis

ObservatoireEI
Start date: January 1, 1991
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The objective of this observatory is to provide a national database of infective endocarditis, informed by all volunteer centers, using a standardized case report forms. Such an observatory will describe the clinical profile, microbiological, therapeutic and evolving of infective endocarditis (IE); analyze the risk factors for the disease and its prognosis factors of evolution; describe management practices; evaluate and compare in the real drug treatment strategies (including antibiotics) and surgical.

NCT ID: NCT03266302 Completed - Clinical trials for Infective Endocarditis

Hemoadsorption for Prevention of Vasodilatory Shock in Cardiac Surgery Patients With Infective Endocarditis

REMOVE
Start date: January 17, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Infective endocarditis (IE) is associated with high hospital mortality for various reasons; one of them is circulatory failure in patients who undergo cardiac surgery for IE. One discussed reason underlying circulatory failure during surgery is the release of vasodilatatory mediators and cytokines. This study examines the efficacy and safety of a hemoadsorption filter which is approved for the reduction of the concentration of cytokines in the bloodstream.

NCT ID: NCT03231449 Active, not recruiting - Stroke Clinical Trials

A Survey of Hospitalizations in Cardiology Units in Sub-Saharan Africa

FEVRIER
Start date: February 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

FEVRIER study is an observatory of hospitalizations in cardiology units in sub-Saharan Africa.

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.

NCT ID: NCT03199287 Completed - Clinical trials for Infective Endocarditis

Clinical Metagenomics of Infective Endocarditis

Meta-ENDO
Start date: June 8, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Infective endocarditis (IE) is an infection of cardiac valves. IE mainly involves bacteria, more rarely fungi. IE is an uncommon diseases with an estimated incidence of 1-12 cases per 100,000 inhabitants per year. The diagnostic of IE relies on the culture of biological samples (blood cultures and per-operative samples) in the bacteriology laboratory in order to identify the pathogen and its susceptibility to antimicrobials. Nonetheless in about 10% of the cases, the blood cultures remain negative, due to antibiotics taken before harvesting, to non-culturable bacteria or to aseptic phenomena. Clinical metagenomics is defined as the application of high-throughput sequencing (NGS) followed by a specific bioinformatics analysis to obtain clinical information, i.e. pathogen identification and the prediction of their susceptibility to antimicrobials. The metagenome of a sample (i.e. all the genomes of the organisms present) virtually contains all the information necessary for bacteriological diagnosis: what is the pathogenic bacteria , and to which antibiotics it is susceptible. Hence, using clinical metagenomics in the context of IE appears seducing in order to overcome the limitations of conventional methods based on culture. Here, we propose to assess the performance of clinical metagenomics in the diagnostic of IE.

NCT ID: NCT03163446 Completed - Clinical trials for Staphylococcus Aureus Bacteremia

Safety, Efficacy and Pharmacokinetics of CF-301 vs. Placebo in Addition to Antibacterial Therapy for Treatment of S. Aureus Bacteremia

Start date: May 23, 2017
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, efficacy and pharmacokinetics (PK) of CF-301 in addition to background standard of care (SOC) antibacterial therapy for the treatment of Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) bloodstream infections (bacteremia), including endocarditis in adults. Patients will be randomized to receive a single intravenous dose of CF-301 or placebo in addition to SOC antibacterial therapy. Patients will be prescribed standard of care antibiotics selected by the investigators based on their professional experience, practice guidelines and local antibiotic susceptibility information for the treatment of S. aureus bacteremia. CF-301 is a lysin and member of a new class of targeted protein-based antimicrobials that has demonstrated activity against S. aureus in laboratory (in vitro) and animal studies, alone and in addition to conventional antibiotics.

NCT ID: NCT03153384 Completed - Bacteremia Clinical Trials

Impact of the Blood Culture Technique on the Diagnosis of Infective Endocarditis

UniEndo
Start date: November 11, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

To evaluate the performance of a single high volume blood culture sampling strategy versus the actually used multiple sampling strategy for the diagnosis and categorization of infective endocarditis according to the Duke-Li classification in a Population of adults suspected of infective endocarditis.