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Neonatal Sepsis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05343403 Active, not recruiting - Premature Birth Clinical Trials

Parental Participation on the Neonatal Ward - the neoPARTNER Study

neoPARTNER
Start date: March 7, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Objective: To investigate the effect of FCR as part of the FICare principles during hospital stay, on parental stress at discharge in parents of preterm or ill infants admitted to the neonatal ward for >7 days as compared to standard medical rounds (SMR) without parents as part of standard neonatal care (SNC).

NCT ID: NCT04800445 Active, not recruiting - Neonatal Sepsis Clinical Trials

Salivary C- Reactive Protein, Mean Platelet Volume and Neutrophil Lymphocyte Ratio as Diagnostic Markers for Neonatal Sepsis

Start date: April 4, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To evaluate reliability of salivary C-reactive protein ,mean platelet volume , neutrophil -lymphocyte ratio , and platelet lymphocyte ratio in diagnosis of neonatal sepsis

NCT ID: NCT04653948 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Group B Strep Infection

Maternal, Neonatal and Infant Outcomes at Kawempe National Referral Hospital

PREPARE
Start date: October 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Maternal immunisation is an evolving field that deserves special attention given its potential to have a significant positive impact on the health of women and children globally, and the potential safety and risk considerations associated with research in this population. The goal of maternal immunisation is to boost maternal levels of specific antibodies to provide the newborn and young infant with sufficient immunity at birth, through trans placental transfer in-utero, to protect them through the period of increased vulnerability. Protection should be adequate to last until they are able to respond to their own active immunisations or infectious challenges. The success of the maternal neonatal tetanus immunisation program demonstrates the utility of this approach. Several other vaccines are recommended in pregnancy, including influenza and pneumococcal vaccines. Promising new vaccines for group B streptococcus (GBS) , respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and cytomegalovirus are under development. They are targeted for use in pregnant women in high-, middle-, and low-income countries. However, these vaccines are likely to be of most benefit in LMICs that have high rates of vaccine preventable diseases. The second work-package (WP2) of the PREPARE portfolio will describe the baseline maternal and neonatal outcomes using anonymised data collected using the routine Kawempe electronic medical records (EMR) system. Furthermore, comprehensive data on pregnancy, neonatal and infant outcome will also be collected in a prospective cohort of women enrolled in the first and second trimesters while attending antenatal care at Kawempe Hospital with follow-up of the mother-infant pair(s) up until at least 14 weeks postpartum to establish longer term outcomes. Standardised case definitions will be used to classify the outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT04549220 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Group B Strep Infection

Serosurveillance Study of Maternally Derived Anti-GBS Antibody

ProGreSs
Start date: April 24, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Globally, neonatal mortality remains unacceptably high, with little change in the death rate in the first 28 days of life since 1990, despite reductions in under-5 mortality of up to 50% over the same period. In 2014, neonatal deaths accounted for 44% of all deaths in children under 5 with neonatal infection accounting for over a third of all deaths. Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is a major cause of septicemia and meningitis in infants globally and a cause of severe adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes in up to 50% of meningitis survivors. It can also lead to sepsis in pregnant women. GBS acquisition occurs through vertical transmission in 15%-50% of infants born to a vaginally/rectally colonized mother. Maternal colonization is a prerequisite for early onset (EO) and a risk factor for late onset (LO) disease. Our proposal will provide these critical data in Uganda (a country with high neonatal disease burden) in a 12 month pilot study to determine: the burden of GBS disease in a cohort of mother/infant pairs and establish an active surveillance platform for monitoring of early and late onset neonatal infection in term and preterm infants in Uganda and compare this to the burden known for other African countries. This provides essential data on GBS disease outcomes from a high-HIV burden African cohort reflecting the usual standard of care in a low income, highly deprived urban environment. This pilot study will establish minimum disease estimates in the Ugandan cohort to determine the feasibility of a cohort study over three years to determine the level of antibody against GBS in cord blood from pregnancies where women are GBS colonized and non-colonized but whose infants do not develop GBS disease in the first three months of life and compare this to the level in the blood of infants who develop GBS disease. We will compare these results with those from other African countries such as South Africa to enable a robust estimate of potential sero-correlates of protection from natural infection against the most common GBS-disease-causing serotypes.

NCT ID: NCT04172012 Active, not recruiting - Neonatal Sepsis Clinical Trials

Use of Probiotics to Reduce Infections, Death and ESBL Colonisation

ProRIDE
Start date: February 1, 2022
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study examines the effect of oral probiotic treatment to newborns on preventing hospitalizations, death and colonization with Extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Gram negative bacteria. Half of the babies will receive 4 weeks treatment with an oral mixture of the probiotic Labinic (R) while the other half will receive a placebo mixture.

NCT ID: NCT03871491 Active, not recruiting - Neonatal SEPSIS Clinical Trials

Azithromycin-Prevention in Labor Use Study (A-PLUS)

Start date: September 1, 2020
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Maternal and neonatal infections are among the most frequent causes of maternal and neonatal deaths, and current antibiotic strategies have not been effective in preventing many of these deaths. Recently, a randomized clinical trial conducted in a single site in The Gambia showed that treatment with oral dose of 2 g azithromycin vs. placebo for all women in labor reduced selected maternal and neonatal infections. However, it is unknown if this therapy reduces maternal and neonatal sepsis and mortality. The A-PLUS trial includes two primary hypotheses, a maternal hypothesis and a neonatal hypothesis. First, a single, prophylactic intrapartum oral dose of 2 g azithromycin given to women in labor will reduce maternal death or sepsis. Second, a single, prophylactic intrapartum oral dose of 2 g azithromycin given to women in labor will reduce intrapartum/neonatal death or sepsis.

NCT ID: NCT03291496 Active, not recruiting - Neonatal SEPSIS Clinical Trials

Microfluidic Assessment of Clinical Outcomes in Preterm Newborns

Start date: November 14, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Sepsis has its greatest impact in the prematurely born (preterm) population. Neonatal sepsis (sepsis within the first month of life) causes over one million deaths worldwide annually, and is one of the most common, difficult and costly problems to diagnose, treat and prevent. The preterm infant can suffer rates of sepsis up to 1000-fold higher than the full-term infant, and bears the brunt of the associated mortality and lifelong sepsis-survivor morbidity. The project is enabled by several novel, validated, microfluidic technologies that are robust and easy to use with little training. These technologies provide comprehensive measures of the functionality of blood PMN population; a critical cellular component of innate immunity. The study team will also extract high-quality nucleic acids from microfluidic-sorted PMNs for transcriptomic analyses. Collectively, these techniques require a total of 250 microliters (µL) of blood, which makes them particularly useful for preterm infants where sample volume is limited, and facilitates serial assessments with unprecedented temporal resolution of key functions of PMNs. These studies, integrated with bioinformatics approaches, will generate new tools for diagnosing sepsis in the newborn and predicting clinical outcomes. Such approaches have the capability to dramatically change the clinical management of the preterm infant, and potentially improve long-term outcomes while reducing hospital costs.

NCT ID: NCT01294865 Active, not recruiting - Neonatal Sepsis Clinical Trials

Soluble Urokinase Plasminogen Activator Receptor (suPAR) in Late-onset Neonatal Sepsis

suPAR
Start date: January 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The purpose of the study is to investigate the plasma levels of Soluble Urokinase Plasminogen Activator Receptor (suPAR) at the diagnosis and after treatment of sepsis, and to determine whether it has a diagnostic and prognostic value in late-onset neonatal sepsis.