View clinical trials related to Pneumococcal Infections.
Filter by:- The purpose of this study is to describe the safety of the study vaccine (called 13vPnC) in people who are 18-49 years of age in India. - This study is seeking participants who are generally healthy adults ≥18 and <50 years of age, with no prior history of pneumococcal vaccination. - Participants will take part in the study for approximately one month which includes two visits to the study clinic. - Participants will receive a single dose of study vaccine (13vPnC) into the arm at visit 1 and will come to study site for a follow-up visit after about a month.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), immunization; is defined as making a person immune or resistant to an infectious disease by applying a vaccine (1). The primary indicator of an effective immunization is that adequate vaccination rates have been achieved. The risk of cancer and chronic diseases increases with advancing age, which increases the importance of immunization in adults. Cancer patients, one of the patient groups for whom adult immunization is a priority and crucial, are subjected to immunosuppressive medications, making them vulnerable to infections. In cancer patients, infections are severe, antimicrobial treatments are sometimes insufficient, leading to morbidity and mortality. One of these infections is pneumococcal disease caused by Streptococcus pneumonia, with high morbidity and mortality in cancer patients. Invasive pneumococcal disease is seen 23-48 times more frequently in cancer patients compared to healthy individuals. In many countries worldwide, the 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine and the 23-valent polysaccharide pneumococcal vaccine, both developed to prevent pneumonia caused by Streptococcus pneumonia, are successfully used in childhood vaccination programs within the framework of WHO's immunization policies. However, in Turkey, like in the rest of the world, the required adult immunization rates have not been achieved yet. Immunization rates among cancer patients, one of the patient groups for whom adult vaccination is required, remain below the targeted levels. Pharmacists, one of the health professionals, have significant contributions to increasing vaccination rates in adults. According to studies, pharmacists can help raise immunization rates by providing education and information. In Turkey, no study has been conducted to assess the impact of vaccination education on cancer patients' attitudes and actions about the pneumococcal vaccine. This study aimed to determine the impact of pharmacist-led pneumonia and pneumococcal vaccine education on cancer patients' vaccination attitudes, knowledge, and vaccination rates.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the concomitant and non-concomitant use of messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) mRNA-1273, the nucleoside-modified mRNA vaccine for active immunization to prevent coronavirus disease (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2), with a 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (V110) for the prevention of pneumococcal disease, or a 15-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (V114) indicated for the prevention of invasive pneumococcal disease.
In this study the antibody response after vaccination with the 13-valent pneumococcal conjugated vaccine (PCV13) followed 2 months later by the 23-valent polysaccharide vaccine (PPSV23) in adults with chronic lymphocytic leukemia will be investigated.
This study is an open-label combined randomized double-blind, positive control phase Ⅰ clinical trial of the a 13-valent Pneumococcal Polysaccharide Conjugate Vaccine manufactured by Sinovac Research & Development Co., Ltd. The purpose of this study is to preliminary evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of the study vaccine
In France, Streptococcus pneumoniae is the leading agent bacterial involved in community lung disease and meningitis. The frequency of these infections and their mortality increase significantly in those at risk such as patients with certain chronic diseases, immunocompromised or on immunosuppressive therapy. This population, despite regular monitoring, has a limited pneumococcal vaccine coverage of around 20%. By carrying out a reconciliation of treatments upon admission to hospital, the clinical pharmacist can detect those without up to date pneumococcal vaccination status. The goal of this management is to make the patient aware of the need for vaccination and organization upon return home. Thus, this limited pneumococcal vaccination coverage would benefit from intervention by regional clinical pharmacy activities. The study investigators want to study the impact of a structured medico-pharmaceutical collaboration on pneumococcal vaccination of patients with risk on discharge from hospital. The investigators hypothesize that this collaboration in patients at risk of infection with pneumococcus could significantly increase their anti-pneumococcal vaccination coverage
This household-based prospective cohort study aims to stablish the household transmission of Respiratory syncytial virus and S. pneumoniae especially in the elderly and infants/children as well as inter-relationship between S. pneumoniae and Respiratory syncytial virus.
This an open phase Ⅳ clinical trial of 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine manufactured by Sinovac Biotech Co., Ltd.The purpose of this study is to evaluate the immunity persistence after single dose of 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine.
Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) is used routinely worldwide as part of infant immunisations to prevent acquisition of Streptococcus pneumoniae, the aetiologic agent responsible for a large proportion of early childhood pneumonia and invasive disease. However, PCV has seen minimal uptake in populations affected by forced displacement and humanitarian crises, where the burden of pneumococcal disease is plausibly elevated. This study seeks to generate evidence on appropriate vaccination strategies for crisis-affected populations. The investigators plan to exhaustively vaccinate children up to 15 years in a camp for displaced persons outside Hargeisa, the capital of Somaliland. The study will deliver PCV in a campaign modality, so as to achieve both short- and long-term herd immunity effects that, the investigators hypothesise, will reduce population-wide nasopharyngeal S. pneumoniae transmission and thereby protect young children from pneumococcal disease. The study will adopt a quasi-experimental design, with baseline and post-intervention surveys to evaluate changes in pneumococcal carriage, complemented by safety assessment in children aged over 2 years, for whom PCV safety data are scarce, and longitudinal data collection on incidence of pneumonia and antibiotic prescriptions in the camp.
Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) is a commensal bacterium, often isolated in the nasopharynx of preschool children and older adults with weakened immune systems, a pathogen that remains the leading cause of Community-Acquired Pneumonia (CAP) and invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) such as Sepsis and Meningitis. CAP is the sixth leading cause of overall mortality and the first cause of infectious disease in Colombia and the world (Montúfar et al, 2013; GBD, 2016; WHO, 2018), and both its incidence and prevalence have remained stable over the past 3 decades. Likewise, CAP due to S. pnemoniae is the most common cause of lower respiratory tract infections in humans worldwide and is associated with high morbidity and mortality in patients who suffer from it. Pneumococcus frequently colonizes the nasopharynx of children and adults and, therefore, this condition has been postulated as a risk factor for the development of CAP. There are reports of the effect of nasopharyngeal colonization in infants, but the implications of this colonization in adults, especially adults with chronic comorbidities, are not known. Additionally, several studies point to a relationship between pathogenicity, colonization capacity, and disease severity according to the infecting pneumococcal serotype. Therefore, it is not known which pneumococcal serotypes are most frequently colonized by adults with chronic diseases (cardiovascular disease (CVD), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), renal disease (RHD), rheumatological disease (MDR), Diabetes Mellitus (DM), among others) and the potential clinical implications of this colonization. For these reasons, this research aims to study the phenomenon of colonization by pneumococcus in patients with chronic diseases for the development of CAP, and the relationship between the virulence genes of different serotypes and the outcome in invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD). This study is based on real evidence (from clinical practice) and translational medicine, is prospective-observational, multicenter and cohort type in consecutive patients. Thus, in a first phase the clinical observation of the subjects will be carried out, a second phase of follow-up and sampling in the patients, and a third phase of molecular analysis.