Clinical Trials Logo

Infections clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Infections.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT04240288 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Intra-Abdominal Infections

Procalcitonin Guided Antibiotic Therapy

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

The overuse of antibiotics is an enormous problem facing the healthcare system both in the United States and across the world. The investigators plan to test the hypothesis that using procalcitonin levels (blood test) to guide the length of antibiotic therapy in patients with complicated intra-abdominal infections leads to shorter antibiotic treatment courses.

NCT ID: NCT04217252 Withdrawn - Infection Clinical Trials

Clinical Application of High-throughput Sequencing Technology for the Diagnosis of Patients With Severe Infection

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

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the clinical value of high throughput sequencing of infectious pathogens for patients with severe infection, and to establish foundation for high throughput sequencing to be the clinical routine infection pathogen examination. This study is a diagnostic study, and the sample size is 320 cases. 320 participants from the department of hematology and intensive care unit who meet the inclusion criteria are randomly divided into the control group and the experimental group with 160 cases in each group. Both the participants of the control group and the experimental group undergo routine clinical diagnosis methods and treatment. In addition, the participants of the experimental group are collected the samples including whole blood, cerebrospinal fluid or alveolar lavage fluid required for high throughput sequencing of infectious pathogens during sample collection for routine pathogenic examination of infection. The pathogen diagnosis rate and the diagnostic accuracy rate between the conventional infectious pathogen tests and the high throughput sequencing of infectious pathogens will be compared in the experimental group. By gathering statistics of consultation hours and cost efficiency, the effect of high throughput sequencing of infectious pathogens on the diagnosis and treatment efficiency of the experimental group and the control group will be compared, and through these indicators, clinical application value for the diagnosis of severe infection patients by high throughput sequencing of infectious pathogens can be evaluated.

NCT ID: NCT04216277 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Acute Respiratory Tract Infection

The Procalcitonin Guided Antibiotics in Respiratory Infections in General Practice

PARI
Start date: February 27, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Antimicrobial resistance rates have reached alarming levels and the Worlds Health Organisation (WHO) states it constitutes a serious public health concern by threatening one of the most effective and mortality lowering interventions in modern medicine. Part of the solution to this problem includes minimizing overuse of antibiotics. But clinical signs alone are often not reliable to guide antibiotic treatment decisions and additional tests may be warranted to assist the doctor. Such tests include point-of-care biomarkers of infection like C-reactive protein (CRP) and procalcitonin (PCT). Targeting antibiotic use to the few patients with a high probability of benefit and withholding in the many with non-serious respiratory infection is a promising strategy and readily implemented in clinical practice. The Procalcitonin guided Antibiotics in Respiratory Infections (PARI) study will assess the effect of a novel point-of-care PCT guided antibiotic stewardship in acute respiratory tract infections in general practice. The overall aim of the PARI study is to reduce antibiotic use in patients with acute respiratory tract infections by targeting antibiotic treatment only to patients with a suspected bacterial etiology and thus likely to benefit from antibiotic therapy. The main research questions are: Does the addition of a point-of-care Procalcitonin test to standard care reduce antibiotic use in primary care? Is the intervention safe for the patients? The PARI study is a pragmatic two-arm (intervention and control (standard care) open randomized non-inferiority trial (up to 1 day difference in recovery) in general practice.

NCT ID: NCT04110353 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Surgical Site Infection

Prophylactic Closed Incision Negative Pressure Wound Therapy on Abdominal Wounds - Clinical and Economic Perspectives

ProNounCE
Start date: June 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates whether specialist negative pressure dressings reduce the risk of wound infections after operations when compared to conservative dressings, and if one negative pressure dressings works better than another. The study will look at patients who have had an open operation on their bowel and the wound closed at the end of the operation.

NCT ID: NCT04070352 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Clostridium Difficile Infection (CDI)

Evaluation of Fidaxomicin in the Treatment of Clostridium Difficile Infection (CDI)

Start date: August 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a single center collection of discarded biological samples and electronic medical review (EMR) data on patients who are hospitalized with clostridium difficile infections and treated with Fidaxomicin

NCT ID: NCT04053946 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Surgical Site Infection

Clinical Assessment of Next Science Wound Gels in Healing Below the Knee Amputation Surgical Wound Compared to SOC

Start date: October 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a 64-patient, 90-day, open -label study on adult patients undergoing below knee amputation for various etiologies. The objective of this study is to assess surgical wound healing and wound bioburden using combination treatment of Next Science SurgX™ Antimicrobial Wound Gel and BlastX™ Antimicrobial Wound Gels as compared to standard of care.

NCT ID: NCT03982810 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Surgical Site Infection

The Role of Guideline-adherent Perioperative Antibiotic Administration and the Risk of Surgical Site Infections After Non-cardiac Surgery.

Start date: June 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study will seek to describe current practice of antibiotic prophylaxis to identify the effect of appropriate perioperative antimicrobial coverage - specifically regarding timing, dose adjustments, and redosing - on surgical site infections (SSI).

NCT ID: NCT03982030 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections

Dalbavancin Outpatient Pilot

Start date: April 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this research is to determine if a new antibiotic called dalbavancin will work to treat and cure certain infections while reducing the need for daily antibiotics by vein.

NCT ID: NCT03861260 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Recurrent Urinary Tract Infection

GAG Replacement vs URethral DIlAtatioN

GUARDIAN
Start date: April 30, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this randomised parallel trial is to compare the efficacy of Glycosaminoglycan layer replacement against cystoscopy and urethral dilatation in the treatment of recurrent urinary tract infection in pre-menopausal women. The women will be randomised to 1 of 2 arms.Arm 1 patients will receive standard treatment from the Urologists. This will involve rigid cystoscopy and urethral dilatation, under general anaesthetic. Arm 2 patients will receive standard treatment from the Gynaecologists.

NCT ID: NCT03815500 Withdrawn - Wound Infection Clinical Trials

Patient Education at Dismissal After Surgical Procedure

Start date: July 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Can improvements in patient dismissal education materials reduce incidence of wound non-healing and infection.