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Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia.

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NCT ID: NCT01940731 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Hospital-acquired Pneumonia

Efficacy and Safety of Colistimethate Sodium Injection Vial to Treat Hospital-acquired Pneumonia in Adults

Start date: October 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

1. To evaluate the clinical and microbiological efficacy and safety of Colistimethate sodium Injection Vial to treat adults with hospital-acquired pneumonia . 2. To Learn the pharmacokinetic characteristics of continuous intravenous infusion of Colistimethate sodium.

NCT ID: NCT01883869 Completed - Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Targeting Platelet-Leukocyte Aggregates in Pneumonia With Ticagrelor

XANTHIPPE
Start date: June 2013
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The hypothesis to be tested is that ticagrelor (Brilintaâ„¢) will reduce platelet activation and markers of inflammation in patients with pneumonia.

NCT ID: NCT01769742 Completed - Clinical trials for Hospital Acquired Pneumonia

Early Mobility Bundle to Prevent Hospital Acquired Pneumonia (HAP) in Medical Inpatients

Start date: February 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Hospital acquired pneumonia (HAP) is a common complication of extended hospital stay. In surgical specialities and critical care early physiotherapy is a recognised way of preventing such infections, and reducing length of hospital stay (LOS), however prevention of this problem is less well studied in medical inpatients. The investigators propose a pilot study to assess the impact of introducing an early mobilisation strategy to general medical and respiratory wards at an acute Trust in the United Kingdom (UK). The investigators will recruit all new admissions to each of 2 respiratory and 2 elderly care wards - 1 of each ward type will be allocated to receive extra physiotherapy input targeting new admissions for early mobilisation. Patients' usual mobility, current mobility and actual activity levels will be studied by accelerometer and simple patient questionnaire in the first 48 hours of admission, and compared between groups. Incidence of HAP and total LOS will be recorded and compared between groups. The investigators hypotheses are that the physiotherapy intervention will increase activity levels, reduce incidence of HAP and reduce LOS. The latter may result in cost savings to the National Health Service (NHS), which the investigators will model using local tariff data. The investigators plan to use our data to power a larger randomised controlled study, or if the intervention is a marked success, such that a control group would be unethical, then a wider service development and evaluation programme.

NCT ID: NCT01577862 Completed - Clinical trials for Pneumonia, Ventilator-Associated

Colistin and Rifampicin for MDR-Acinetobacter

CoRAb
Start date: November 2008
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Acinetobacter baumannii causes severe infections (pneumonia, bacteremia, organ space) with high lethality in hospitalised critically ill patients. It can acquire resistance to all classes of antibiotics (multidrug resistance, MDR) except an 'old' drug, colistin, which may be the only therapeutic option. However, colistin is not registered for this indication. The addition of rifampicin to colistin has been shown to be synergistic in vitro, and may be promising in vivo, but this combination has not been studied in comparison with colistin alone. The purpose of this randomised, open-label, multicentre clinical trial is to assess whether the association of colistin and rifampicin reduces significantly the mortality of patients with severe MDR A. baumannii infections compared with colistin alone. The trial will enroll 210 patients from intensive care units (ICU) of five tertiary care hospitals where MDR A. baumannii infection is endemic with epidemic phases. Patients will be randomly allocated to either colistin alone (control arm) or colistin plus rifampicin (experimental arm). Primary end point is overall mortality, defined as death occurring within 30 days from randomisation. Secondary end points will be disease-specific death, microbiological eradication, hospitalization length, emergence of resistance to colistin during treatment.

NCT ID: NCT01561469 Completed - Clinical trials for Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia

Evaluation of Patients With Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia Treated With Linezolid or Vancomycin

Start date: November 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The objective of this study is to review the local management of patients with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus hospital-acquired pneumonia treated with vancomycin or linezolid with the goal to define if any difference exists among these antimicrobials in regard to clinical and economic outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT01266863 Completed - Clinical trials for Hospital-acquired Pneumonia

E Test Strips Applied to Bronchoalveolar Lavage for Suspicion of Hospital-acquired Pneumonia to Accelerate Antibiogram Analysis.

Start date: September 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To rapidly adapt or deescalate the initially broad antibiotic treatment, an antibiogram analysis is required. E test strips have successfully provided an antibiogram 24 h after having been directly applied to bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL). An open-label, prospective cohort study of consecutive patients with hospital-acquired pneumonia will be conducted with the aim of validating a new method increasing the rapidity of antibiogram analysis compared to standard methods of culture. This antibiogram will be provided by E test strips directly applied to bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) samples and analyzed from the 6th up to the 24th hour after its completion. The occurrence of major errors (S with E test method, I or R with standard method) and minor errors (I or R with E test method and S with standard method)will be observed and a comparison of H6, H10 and H24 results performed.

NCT ID: NCT00543608 Terminated - Clinical trials for Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia

Clinical Efficacy of Intravenous Iclaprim Versus Vancomycin in the Treatment of Hospital-Acquired, Ventilator-Associated, or Health-Care-Associated Pneumonia

Start date: November 2007
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to compare the clinical cure rates of two dosing regimens of iclaprim with vancomycin (every 12 hours [q12h]) in the treatment of patients with hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP), ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP), or health-care-associated pneumonia (HCAP) suspected or confirmed to be due to Gram-positive pathogens.