View clinical trials related to Pneumonia.
Filter by:This is a Phase 2 clinical study to support the use of AFX3772 in healthy infants for the prevention of pneumococcal disease. The purpose of this study is to determine the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of 3 different dose levels of AFX3772 compared with PCV13. Infants approximately 2 months of age will be enrolled and receive 4 doses of study vaccine over 8 protocol-defined visits spanning a duration of approximately 18 to 21 months. Part 1 is the dose escalation, lead-in portion of the study in which infants at each dose level will be randomized 3:1 in sequential cohorts of increasing doses of AFX3772 or PCV13. Enrollment in Cohorts 2 and 3 will proceed following Data Monitoring Committee (DMC) review of cumulative safety and tolerability data from preceding cohorts. Following completion of DMC review of safety and tolerability data for the cohorts enrolled in Part 1, additional infants will be enrolled and randomized equally to receive either PCV13 or AFX3772 at different dose levels approved for evaluation in Part 2.
This is a single centre, open-label, feasibility randomised controlled trial. The study aims to assess the feasibility of conducting an RCT to compare the PneuX ETT with standard care in hospitalised patients requiring mechanical ventilation. The patient population for this study are those who are experiencing critical illness requiring intubation and ventilatory support. Patients will be randomised in equal proportions into one of 2 arms: to be intubated using a Venner PneuX Endotracheal Tube (ETT) or using the standard tube. For this feasibility study, a total of 50 patients will be randomised into two groups (25 in each). All patients will be recruited at a single site (University Hospital of Wales, part of Cardiff & Vale UHB). The study will investigate several feasibility measures including recruitment, delivery of the intervention (including device-related adverse events), acceptability and adherence to the intervention and sampling, use of Peptest to measure microaspiration events, rate of pepsin positive samples, rate of tracheobronchial colonisation, volume of sub-glottic aspirate, rate of VAP, length of ICU and hospital stay, demonstrate the validity of study documentation and provide preliminary data for 50 patients. The data will inform the pilot and main phase of the study.
The aim of this study is to examine the effectiveness of nurse-driven oral management for improvements of oral frailty, and oral bacteria pneumonia patients with oral frailty using a randomized controlled trial (RCT) design. Hospitalized pneumonia patients (N = 90) will be randomized into three groups (oral management, oral care, and standard of care). The primary outcomes include the oral frailty measures determined by seven-item included oral hygiene, oral dryness, occlusion force, tongue-lip motor function, tongue pressure, mastication function, and swallowing function. Saliva samples were collected from the oral cavity before the bacterial culture was performed in the laboratory. Oral frailty measures and the presence of bacterial exposure were evaluated at baseline (1st day), on days 5, and at the time of discharge. The investigators will perform statistical analyses according to the intention-to-treat principle. All missing values will be imputed using the last value carry-forward method. The between-group differences will be examined using a mixed model in which group and time interaction will be included. This study finding could provide oral management strategies that could improve oral frailty and decrease oral bacteria for preventing recurrent pneumonia infection among middle-aged and older adults with pneumonia.
RESPIRE is a randomized, unblinded, controlled study to measure the impact of a strategy based on a PCR test on the adjustment of antimicrobial therapy in immunocompromised patients suspected with ventilator-associated or hospital-acquired pneumonia (VAP/HAP) requiring mechanical ventilation (MV) in Intensive Care Unit (ICU). The gold-standard microbiological diagnostic method for pneumonia in the ICU is based on culture identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing. Results are obtained in several days after the initiation of empiric antimicrobial therapy, exposing patients to a potential inappropriate broad-spectrum antimicrobial treatment. We aim to measure the impact of a PCR-based strategy to improve the percentage of patients with VAP or HAP receiving targeted antimicrobial therapy 24 hours after diagnosis compared to standard care
Establish a interstitial lung disease (ILD) registry and biorepository to lead towards a further understanding of the disease.
A retrospective study to evaluate the predictability of abnormal arterial blood gas measurements through novel observations of continuous trends in electronically measured respiratory in a mixed cohort of respiratory compromised patients.
CAP'Hospi is an observational, multicentric study in France which primary objective is to describe the proportion of Community Acquired Pneumonia due to serotypes included in PCV20 among adults hospitalized for CAP
Non-tuberculous mycobacterial (NTM) pulmonary disease (PD) is an emerging condition with heterogeneous manifestations from both the microbiological and the clinical point of view. Diagnostic and therapeutic guidelines are available but there are still unmet patients' and physicians' needs, including the exams to perform in the nutritional evaluation and intervention to improve health-related QoL and to control gastrointestinal side-effects during antimicrobial therapy, particularly in those with low body mass index and history of weight loss.
This is an epidemiology study for the prevalence and serotypes of pneumococcus pneumoniae in hospitalized patients with community acquired pneumonia (CAP). The serotypes of the pneumococcus pneumoniae will be determined by a urinary antigen assay
This is a prospective exploratory biodistribution study in patients with interstitial lung disease (ILD). The purpose of this research study is to determine where and to which degree the FAPI tracer (68Ga-FAPI-46) accumulates in normal and fibrotic lung tissues of patients with interstitial lung disease. The study will include patients with interstitial lung disease who have or will initiate a new ILD medication OR will undergo tissue biopsy or surgery of the lung. The study will include 30 patients, the upper limit for PET imaging studies conducted under the Radioactive Drug Research Committee (RDRC) purview. Participants will be injected with up to 7 mCi of 68-GaFAPi and will undergo one PET/CT scan and one High Resolution CT of the lungs. The study is sponsored by Ahmanson Translational Theranostic Division at UCLA.