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Filter by:The two main cytomegalovirus (CMV) prevention strategies are prophylaxis and preemptive therapy. Prophylaxis effectively prevents CMV infection after solid organ transplantation (SOT), but is associated with high rates of neutropenia and late onset of post-prophylactic disease. In contrast, preemptive therapy has the advantage of leading to lower rates of CMV disease and robust humoral and T-cell responses. It is widely used in hematopoietic cell transplant recipients, but is rarely used after solid organ transplant recipients due to logistical considerations.
Context Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is a frequent and potentially severe event in solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients. Most of available treatment display adverse effects that limit their use. Therefore, in case of an infection, it is of primary importance to identify the patients at high risk of severe infection and/or disease, and who ill benefit the most from antiviral therapy. As CMV infection is mainly controlled by cellular immunity, measuring specific anti-CMV T lymphocyte immunity could be an interesting tool for identifying these at-risk individuals. One of these tests is the QuantiFERON-CMV (QF-CMV) assay (QuiagenTM, Courtabœuf, France). Aim of the study The aim of the study is to determine the extent to which the QF-CMV can be use to identify, among SOT recipients with a CMV viremia, those that may not need antiviral therapy. Methods Participation to the study will be proposed to SOT recipients with an asymptomatic CMV infection with a blood viral load between 1,000 and 15,000 IU/mL. The QF-CMV will be performed in included participants, and the result will be given or not to the clinician in charge (according to the attributed group through randomisation). - In the group without result communication, the clinician in charge will determine whether a treatment is needed according to the guidelines and the local practices. - in the group with result communication, the clinician in charge will be advised not to introduce antiviral therapy if the result is positive, and to determine whether a treatment is needed according to the guidelines and the local practices if the result is positive. In the following weeks, the viral load will be monitored, along with creatininemia, cell blood count, and kalemia (to detect antiviral adverse effect). The participants will be sampled: - 5 to 12 days after QF-CMV sampling (V2) ; - 7 to 14 days days after V2 (V3 - between D12 and D26) ; - 7 to 14 days days after V3 (V4 - between D19 and D40) . Endpoints The primary endpoint is the rate of uncontrolled infection 5 to 12 days after QF-CMV sampling, defined as follows: - Blood CMV viral load >10,000 IU/mL [4 log]; - And/or increase in blood viral load ≥0.5 log IU/mL with CV otherwise >5000 IU/mL; - And/or the onset of CMV disease. The secondary endpoint is the is the occurrence antiviral adverse effects (hematoxicity or nephrotoxicity).
Vonoprazan and high-dose amoxicillin dual therapy was used as a control group to evaluate the clinical effiency and safety of Banxiaxiexin decoction combined with vonoprazan and high-dose amoxicillin dual therapy in the treatment of helicobacter pylori infection complicated with functional dyspepsia,through a randomized controlled trail.
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare two strategies to monitor human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infections in transplanted patients receiving letermovir (LTV) as anti-HCMV prophylaxis. HCMV infection after transplantation is diagnosed by detection of HCMV DNA in blood. However, due to the peculiar mechanism of action of LTV, most episodes of HCMV DNA detection are caused by release in the blood stream of non-infectious HCMV DNA. In true episodes of productive infection, HCMV DNA in blood is present inside the virion and therefore is resistant to DNAse digestion. Conversely, when non-infectious free-floating HCMV DNA is released in the bloodstream, it will be degraded after treatment of plasma with DNAse and will not be detectable by real-time PCR assays. Researchers will compare determination of HCMV DNA in blood with or without previous digestion of non-infectious free-floating DNA with DNAse. In patients of the Control group HCMV DNA will be tested without DNAse digestion. If HCMV DNA is positive, patients will stop LTV prophylaxis and receive antiviral therapy with another drug. In patients of the Study group HCMV DNA will be tested after DNAse digestion. Only if HCMV DNA is positive after DNAse digestion, patients will stop LTV prophylaxis and receive antiviral therapy with another drug. The main aim of the study is to demonstrate that, by avoiding inappropriate antiviral therapy during LTV prophylaxis, transplant patients will suffer of lower antiviral-drug-related toxicity. A monitoring strategy able to identify true episodes of HCMV productive infection during LTV prophylaxis will lead to a lower rate of inappropriate antiviral therapy and drug-related toxicity without an increased risk of HCMV disease.
The use of antibiotic therapy is common in intensive care units and primarily involves beta-lactams. Its optimal implementation is made difficult by the pharmacokinetic changes inherent in critically ill patients. Despite the current recommendations from the French Society of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care (SFAR) and the French Society of Pharmacology and Therapeutics (SFPT), there are no recommendations on prescription modalities for patients under veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO). The use of antibiotic therapy is common in VA-ECMO patients and their pharmacokinetic variability factors are then exacerbated. We aim to conduct a prospective, multicenter, interventional study designed to identify predictive factors for failure to achieve therapeutic target circulating concentrations of beta-lactams in patients under VA-ECMO treated with one of the studied beta-lactams
The goal of this clinical trial is to test two advices on alcohol drinking in more than 10.000 Spanish adult drinkers (men of 50 or more years and women of 55 or more years). The main question it aims to answer is to test the non-inferiority advice of a moderate alcohol drinking pattern on all-cause mortality and other chronic disease like cardiovascular disease, cancer or type 2 diabetes. Participants will receive during 4 years an advice to drink alcohol following a Mediterranean Alcohol Drinking Pattern (MADP): consuming alcohol in moderation, avoidance of binge drinking and preference for red wine. Researchers will compare those who will receive a MADP advice with those who will receive an advice on abstention to see if the advice on MADP is not inferior than the abstention advice to prevent all-cause mortality and other chronic diseases.
The goals of this observational study are: i) investigate the natural history of non-primary (i.e. reactivation and reinfection) HCMV infection in HCMV-seropositive Italian women and the relevant humoral and cell-mediated immune response; ii) reliably distinguish between reactivation and reinfection. Prerequisite of the study is the availability of a maternal HCMV strain at baseline (original strain) to which subsequent strains detected during follow-up are compared in order to distinguish between reactivation (original strain) or reinfection (new strain). To increase the likelihood of exposure to different HCMV strains, the study population is restricted to mothers of children attending day care centers.
A phase 1, single-center, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial to evaluate the safety and tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and preliminary efficacy of multiple administrations of TNP-2092 Capsules in combination with Rabeprazole Sodium Enteric-coated Tablets in asymptomatic healthy subjects with Helicobacter pylori infection
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and the tolerance of letermovir as part of dual antiviral therapy (in association with valganciclovir) in renal transplant recipients with CMV DNAemia, requiring valganciclovir treatment per investigator's judgment.
Respiratory tract infections are among the leading causes of death worldwide and many of these infections are preventable through vaccination. One of the most important bacteria from an etiological and mortality point of view regarding respiratory and systemic infections is the gram-positive Streptococcus pneumoniae. Four types of vaccines are currently available for this pathogen: three pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCV13, PCV15, and PCV20) and one polysaccharide vaccine (PPSV23). In Italy, people over 65 years of age and people suffering from chronic pathologies with effects on the immune system would be advised to be vaccinated with the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine and with the polysaccharide vaccine as a second dose. However, there are no data available in Italy on vaccination coverage in these population categories and above all the vaccination rates in patients who have a history of an episode of invasive pneumococcal infection are not known. The aim of the study is to measure how many patients are vaccinated for S. pneumoniae after hospitalization for a systemic pneumococcal infection in order to understand patients' awareness of preventing this infection after receiving a first diagnosis.