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Pneumonia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03534622 Completed - Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Evaluate Safety and Pharmacokinetic To Assess Bronchopulmonary Disposition of Intravenous Delafloxacin in Healthy Adults

Start date: April 30, 2018
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the steady-state intrapulmonary disposition of delafloxacin in healthy adult participants.

NCT ID: NCT03523182 Completed - Malaria Clinical Trials

Spirulina Supplementation and Infant Growth, Morbidity and Motor Development

Start date: March 1, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: In developing countries, micronutrient deficiency in infants is associated with growth faltering, morbidity, and delayed motor development. One of the potentially low-cost and sustainable solutions is to use locally producible food for the home fortification of complementary foods. Objective: The objectives are to test the hypothesis that locally producible spirulina platensis supplementation would achieve the following: 1) increase infant physical growth; 2) reduce morbidity; and 3) improve motor development. Design: 501 Zambian infants are randomly assigned into a control (CON) group or a spirulina (SP) group. Children in the CON group (n=250) receive a soya-maize-based porridge for 12 months, whereas those in the SP group (n=251) receive the same food but with the addition of spirulina. The change in infants' anthropometric status, morbidity, and motor development over 12 months are assessed.

NCT ID: NCT03506113 Completed - Clinical trials for Ventilator Associated Pneumonia

GRam Stain-guided Antibiotics ChoicE for Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia (GRACE-VAP) Trial

Start date: April 1, 2018
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Background: Optimising the use of antibiotic agents is a pressing challenge to overcoming the rapid emergence and spread of multidrug-resistant pathogens in intensive care units (ICUs). Although Gram staining may possibly provide immediate information for predicting pathogenic bacteria, Gram stain-guided initial antibiotic treatment is not well established in the ICU setting. The investigators planned the GRam stain-guided Antibiotics ChoicE for Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia (GRACE-VAP) trial to investigate whether Gram staining can safely restrict the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics in patients with ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP), which is one of the most common hospital-acquired infections in ICUs. Methods/Design: The GRACE-VAP trial is a multicenter, randomised, open-label parallel-group trial to assess the non-inferiority of Gram stain-guided initial antibiotic treatment to guidelines-based initial antibiotic treatment for the primary endpoint of clinical cure rate in patients with VAP. Secondary endpoints include the coverage rates of initial antibiotic therapies, the selected rates of anti-pseudomonal agents and anti-methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) agents as initial antibiotic therapies, 28-day all-cause mortality, ICU-free days, ventilator-free days, and adverse events. Participants are randomly assigned to receive Gram stain-guided treatment or guidelines-based treatment at a ratio of 1:1. In the Gram stain group, results of Gram staining of endotracheal aspirate are used to guide the selection of antibiotics. In the guidelines group, the combination of an anti-pseudomonal agent and anti-MRSA agent are administered. A total sample size of 200 was estimated to provide a power of 80% with a 1-sided alpha level of 2.5% and a non-inferiority margin of 20%, considering 10% non-evaluable participants. Discussion: The GRACE-VAP trial is expected reveal whether Gram staining can reduce the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics without impairing patient outcomes and thereby provide evidence for an antibiotics selection strategy in patients with VAP.

NCT ID: NCT03502291 Completed - Pneumonia Clinical Trials

The Effect of Live Attenuated Inactivated Influenza Vaccine on Experimental Human Pneumococcal Carriage Study

LAIV/EHPC
Start date: August 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The investigators are interested in examining the effect of the Live Attenuated Influenza (flu) Vaccine (LAIV) upon nasal carriage of bacteria called Streptococcus pneumoniae (also known as pneumococcus). The nasal spray is a live attenuated vaccine which means that it has weakened virus that does not cause disease. This vaccine is licenced in the United Kingdom for children and adolescents from 2 to 18 years of age. Pneumococcus can commonly be found harmlessly inhabiting the nose where it does not cause any problem (pneumococcal colonisation). About 10% of adults carry pneumococcus at any one time, and almost all adults experience an episode of carriage at least once per year. Carriage acts as a natural vaccine, boosting immunity against pneumococcal infection in adults and children. During influenza there is an increase in the burden of pneumococcal pneumonia. We have studied the effects of pneumococcus for many years and have developed a programme in which we can nasally inoculate healthy participants with a dose of pneumococcus and achieve a reproducible carriage rate. The investigators would now like to use this model to investigate the effects of the nasal influenza vaccine upon pneumococcal carriage and to better understand how influenza infections lead to increased susceptibility to pneumonia. Pneumococcal disease in young adults is rare - less than 10 cases per 100,000 people per year. When pneumococcus does cause problems, usually in young children or elderly people, it can be very serious as it is responsible for diseases such as pneumonia, sepsis and meningitis, which kill millions of children around the world each year.

NCT ID: NCT03497962 Completed - Pneumonia Clinical Trials

P4 Peptide in Community Acquired Pneumonia

P4
Start date: January 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The investigators' aim is to find out whether immune cells from patients with a severe chest infection will react ex vivo to a new immunomodulating peptide, P4 as part of augmented passive immunotherapy The investigators know that P4 treatment can successfully improve the efficiency of specialized immune cells responsible for killing bacteria. The investigators also know that P4 treatment is effective in healthy human volunteers but wish to extend this observation to patients that have infection, as immune cells may react differently in these patients. If this study is successful, the investigators hope to be moving closer to a new treatment against severe bacterial infections. The investigators plan to recruit patients admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and healthy volunteers, using carefully established inclusion and exclusions criteria with severe community acquired pneumonia (CAP) and obtain both blood and (if clinically feasible), a bronchoscopy BAL sample (washing of lung tissue).

NCT ID: NCT03496220 Completed - Clinical trials for Ventilator Associated Pneumonia

Effect of Angulus on Patient-elevation Compliance

Start date: July 10, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Ventilator-associated events (VAE) are a scourge of critical care settings and hospital systems at large. There is extensive evidence that ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) and related VAEs increase mortality rates in critically ill patients by up to 50%, while simultaneously increasing cost of care. C Best-practice guidelines state that positioning ventilated patients at an angle between 30-45 degrees significantly reduces the potential for VAP and other VAE to develop. While the intent of the guidelines is to govern patient elevation angle, the lack of a mechanism to accurately measure patient elevation requires that nurses rely on the head-of-bed (HOB) protractor - a tool which reflects the angle of the bed, not the patient - to measure compliance. Depending upon the position and posture of the patient in the bed, a patient's elevation angle may be significantly different from the HOB angle. Critical care teams currently rely on built-in HOB protractors and digital inclinometers that measure the angle of the bed not the patient. Angulus, LLC has developed a dual-component Angulus sensor to fill this gap in critical care technology. Angulus enables critical care practitioners to instantaneously understand a patient's elevation, identify when the patient is outside of the desired 30-45 degree recumbency scope, and efficiently correct the patient's orientation with immediate feedback. Angulus supports real-time minute-to-minute data display as well as longitudinal aggregation of data.

NCT ID: NCT03475732 Completed - Sepsis Clinical Trials

Pharmacokinetics of XueBiJing in Patients With Sepsis

Start date: March 18, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Pharmacokinetics and disposition of XueBiJing compounds in patients with sepsis

NCT ID: NCT03474991 Completed - Clinical trials for Community-acquired Pneumonia

KIDS-STEP_Betamethasone Therapy in Hospitalised Children With CAP

KIDS-STEP
Start date: October 28, 2018
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to concurrently evaluate whether adjunct treatment with corticosteroids in children hospitalized with CAP is more effective in terms of the proportion of children reaching clinical stability and whether such adjunct treatment is no worse in terms of CAP relapse.

NCT ID: NCT03473314 Completed - Clinical trials for Non-Tuberculous Mycobacterial Pneumonia

Prolonged-Use of Inhaled Gaseous Nitric Oxide (gNO) for Adult With Non-Tuberculous Mycobacteria Infection

Start date: March 9, 2018
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

An open labeled Study (NCT03331445) is demonstrating encouraging safety and efficacy results for most subjects receiving 160ppm nitric oxide gas (gNO) for treatment of non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) over a 15 day treatment regimen. In one subject, who had a reduction in sputum culture concentration of Bacterium bolletii from plus 3 to plus 1 corresponding to a 2-3 log10 cfu/gm reduction during the treatment, the one-week post treatment follow-up sputum culture had increased to plus 2. It is hypothesized that a longer treatment period may be necessary to fully eradicate NTM from the sputum culture in chronic lung disease. This study will extend the period of gNO exposure for a prolonged period of time (3 months) to attempt to fully eradicate the NTM in this single subject. This study will transition from the medical clinic to supervised delivery in the patient's home environment.

NCT ID: NCT03469271 Completed - Cancer Clinical Trials

Maintain Respiratory Muscle Function and Reduce Pneumonia Risk in Cancer Patients

Start date: May 25, 2018
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This research is intended to begin to explore the impact of inspiratory muscle resistance exercise and/or 1,25(OH)2D3 for improving respiratory muscle strength in cancer patients (subjects).