View clinical trials related to Mycoses.
Filter by:Prospective observational cohort consisting of all adult patients admitted to participating critical care units (ICU and CCU) during the study period, with blood cultures collected as part of their care, and who did not express any objection to participating. For each patient, data will be collected prospectively for each blood culture set collected.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether photopheresis therapy can be used to improve the clinical course of early stage cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). Currently, photopheresis is performed as a palliative treatment for late stage CTCL. However, recent studies have demonstrated that patients with early stage CTCL may have markers in their blood which were previously observed primarily in late stage disease, such as clonal T cell populations. Considering these findings, the study aims to investigate whether photopheresis therapy may be used earlier in the disease course to produce a clinical response.
This is a Phase 1, open-label, single center, non-randomized study to evaluate the absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion (ADME) of an oral solution of radiolabeled Ibrexafungerp following repeat administration in healthy male subjects. All subjects will undergo preliminary screening procedures, will remain the clinical unit for approximately 26 days and will receive radiolabeled Ibrexafungerp, orally for 3 days.
Invasive fungal infections are serious and frequent diseases in our hospitals, especially in intensive care units. In accordance with the institutional recommendations, it is necessary to have a clinical decision support system to support the clinicians in a rapid and optimal prescription of antifungals for invasive fungal diseases. This clinical decision support system will benefit patients but also clinicians who will gain in medical efficiency. It will also have an ethical dimension since it will guarantee optimal antifungal treatments for all patients. The purpose of the research is to define the percentage of concordance between the medical prescription and the recommendation of the clinical decision support system.
To explore the PK/PD of deoxycholic amphotericin B in invasive fungal infection patients with sepsis/septic shock;To compare the PK/PD of deoxycholic amphotericin B in invasive fungal infection patients with sepsis and septic shock.
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.
This study is being performed to see if 18F-FDS is a useful imaging agent for diagnosis of bacterial infections. Position Emission Tomography (PET)/ computed tomography (CT) scans will be obtained after intravenous injection of 18F-FDS to determine biodistribution and pathophysiology in diseased subjects.
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.
Background - Advanced cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (mycosis fungoides, MF) is an incurable extranodal mature lymphoma with poor prognosis. Currently available therapies provide only short-term remissions. Rationale - MF is an immunogenic cancer and expresses a high number of neoantigens. therefore it it reasonable to assume that it would respond to immune checkpoint inhibitors. Objectives - The primary objective is to test the clinical efficacy (objective response rate) of the immune checkpoint inhibitor cemiplimab in patients with advanced mycosis fungoides (MF) who failed first-line therapy, defined as the sum of complete and partial responses (where at least 50% reduction of mSWAT is achieved).
This study will assess the pharmacokinetics (PK), safety, and tolerability of a single intravenous (IV) dose of rezafungin in paediatric subjects from birth to <18 years who are receiving concomitant systemic antifungals as clinically indicated.