View clinical trials related to Invasive Fungal Disease.
Filter by:This study is a prospective, multicenter, single-arm study, that aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of amphotericin B cholesterol-sulfate complex (ABCD) for injection in the first-line treatment of patients with invasive fungal diseases, hoping to provide a reference for the clinical treatment of invasive fungal diseases. Patients with hematologic diseases who meet the criteria for inclusion and discharge with febrile neutropenia and suspected fungal infection were treated with ABCD antifungal therapy for 14 days while receiving treatment for underlying diseases, and the response rate of treatment was observed.
Mold invasive infections are associated with an important mortality despite optimization of the antifungal treatment. In a few case reports, immune checkpoints inhibitors, initially developed for neoplastic diseases, have shown a potential beneficial effect in such devastating infections by restoring an efficient immune response. The investigators propose a longitudinal monitoring of the adaptative immune response, notably immune checkpoint expression on T cells, during mold invasive infections to help identify the patients who could benefit from the adjunction of immunotherapy and the optimal timing of such strategy.
This study is a post-approval commitment study, and is designed to further evaluate the safety and efficacy of isavuconazole in a relatively larger Chinese population who will receive isavuconazole treatment in a post-marketing setting. This is a single arm, prospective, multi-center study. This study is seeking Chinese patients with proven, probable or possible Invasive Fungal Disease (IFD) caused by Aspergillus species or other filamentous fungi. All the participants will receive isavuconazole treatment. The longest treatment duration in this study is 84 days (up to 180 days for participants diagnosed with IM). The primary objective is to characterize the safety and tolerability of isavuconazole through observing the treatment emergent adverse events.
Many children and young people are at risk of invasive fungal disease (IFD), such as those who have had a haematopoietic stem cell transplants, those with an immune deficiency or those who are prescribed immunosuppressive drugs, for example, corticosteroids. One type of mould that causes invasive fungal disease is called Aspergillus. There is currently no quick test which can tell us if someone has an invasive fungal disease caused by Aspergillus called Aspergillosis. It is a difficult condition to diagnose and the results from the tests that are involved take days or weeks to come back. These tests including a few different blood tests, a scan of the lungs (CT scans) and taking fluid from inside the lungs/airway. A new test for Aspergillosis is the lateral flow device (LFD) assay. This is a rapid test which gives a result within minutes. It involves testing a sample of the fluid from the lungs/airway. This fluid can be obtained as part of the routine investigations for Aspergillosis. It has been shown to be a good and safe test in adults but the investigators do not know if it will be a valuable test in children and young people yet. The purpose of this study is to determine whether the LFD test can effectively diagnose Aspergillosis in children and young people.
In order to better guide clinical medication, verify the efficacy and safety of ABCD in the treatment of various invasive fungal disease, the investigators have designed a multi-center, retrospective registration study. Diagnosis and treatment data for patients with different types of invasive fungal disease in clinical actual environment was collapsed by a database for collaborative exchange on antifungal research.
The purpose of this pivotal study is to determine if intravenous Rezafungin is efficacious and safe in the prevention of invasive fungal diseases when compared to the standard antimicrobial regimen.
A small proportion of intensive care unit patients receiving antifungals have a proven invasive fungal infection. However, antifungal treatment has side effects such as toxicity, emergence of resistance, and high cost. Moreover, empirical antifungal treatment is still a matter for debate in these patients. Our study aimed to determine the incidence, associated factors, and safety of de-escalation of antifungals in immunocompromised critically ill patients. This prospective observational study is conducted in 14 ICU, during a 6 months period. All immunocompromised patients hospitalized for >5d and treated with antifungals for suspected or proven invasive candida infection will be included De-escalation is defined as a reduction in antifungal spectrum or stopping initial drugs within the 5 days following their initiation. The three antifungals considered in this study are from the narrowest to the widest spectrum: fluconazole, caspofungin and liposomal amphotericin B.
The purpose of this trial is to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of single intravenous of Amphotericin B Colloidal Dispersion(ABCD)in Chinese healthy subjects.
The Sponsor hypothesize that Next-generation Sequencing (NGS) can identify fungal pathogens, is more accurate than other noninvasive options and can report fungal genomic load.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether F18 fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) positron-emission tomography scan (PET scan) is useful for the therapy strategy of hepatosplenic candidiasis.