Clinical Trials Logo

Pneumonia clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Pneumonia.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT06065618 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Community-acquired Pneumonia

Characteristics of Hospitalized Patients With Community-acquired Pneumonia

Start date: September 22, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

At present, the epidemiological characteristics and the distribution of pathogens of community-acquired pneumonia in Shandong Province are not clear. In order to understand the characteristics of community-acquired pneumonia, the distribution of pathogens and the risk factors of complications in Shandong Province, it is necessary to carry out investigation and study, which will provide the basis and support for the future prospective cohort study of pulmonary infection.

NCT ID: NCT06044428 Recruiting - Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Steadysense -Early Detection of Postoperative Infections Through Continuous Temperature Measurement

Start date: August 14, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this observational study is to review whether postoperative infections can be detected earlier by a continuous measurement of body temperature of patients compared to single daily measurements. Within 25 weeks 100 patients, which underwent visceral surgery less than 48h ago, will be included. A patch (Steadytemp ®) will be attached to participants, continuously measuring the body temperature. In addition infection parameters and medication of the participants will be documented.

NCT ID: NCT05989269 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Ventilator Associated Pneumonia

Diagnostic Stewardship for Ventilator Associated Pneumonia

Start date: August 21, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this pragmatic cluster-randomized crossover trial is to test if less unnecessary antibiotics are prescribed when the lab reports respiratory culture test results in a specific way for patients who have respiratory cultures obtained, but do not meet clinical criteria for ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP). The main question it aims to answer is: Does a modified culture reporting intervention reduce unnecessary antibiotics for ventilated patients in the intensive care unit (ICU)? Researchers will compare antibiotic use outcomes between eligible patients whose test results are communicated using the modified reporting and those with standard reporting of results.

NCT ID: NCT05987982 Recruiting - Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Mouth Odor on Preventing Pneumonia by Oral Frailty

Start date: August 14, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This research plan aims to first collect data on the oral function and oral hygiene status of the elderly population in the community and to understand the normal model of oral frailty among the older adults in the community. Subsequently, a comparison will be made between the oral status of hospitalized patients and the community-dwelling elderly population. The goal is to verify whether oral odor can be used as an objective biological indicator following intervention.

NCT ID: NCT05982015 Recruiting - Stroke Clinical Trials

Efficacy Study II on Remote Ischemic Preconditioning for the Prevention of Stroke-Associated Pneumonia

RICA-2
Start date: January 22, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Verifying whether remote ischemic adaptation can reduce the occurrence of stroke related pneumonia in acute stroke patients within 24 hours of onset

NCT ID: NCT05979545 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Ventilator Associated Pneumonia

EaRly impAct theraPy With Ceftazidime-avibactam Via rapID Diagnostics

RAPID
Start date: December 12, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to propose a seamless intervention linking rapid bacterial isolate identification and antibiotic resistance gene detection and targeted antibiotic prescription to minimise time between infection onset and appropriate treatment in patients with Pseudomonas aeruginosa or carbapenemase producing Enterobacterales infections. This is an investigator initiated trial. The primary hypothesis is that these interventions will lead to improved clinical outcomes amongst patients with hospital-acquired bloodstream infection, hospital-acquired pneumonia or ventilator-associated pneumonia due to carbapenem non-susceptible Pseudomonas aeruginosa or Enterobacterales, compared to standard antibiotic susceptibility testing. Patients will be randomised to either a control or intervention arm. Patients randomised to the intervention arm will have relevant specimens analysed by rapid microbiological diagnostics and will have early availability of ceftazidime-avibactam if appropriate. Patients randomised to the control arm, will have samples analysed by clinical microbiology laboratories using standard of care diagnostics. Antibiotics will be available to these patients as per usual institutional practice.

NCT ID: NCT05976581 Recruiting - Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Using Probability of Community-Acquired Pneumonia to Tailor Antimicrobials Among Inpatients

UP-CAPTAIn
Start date: November 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this prospective randomized study is to improve antibiotic use among hospitalized patients with suspected pneumonia. An alert was built into the electronic health record to guide use of diagnostic testing based on probability of bacterial pneumonia. Patients with test results suggesting viral infection will be randomized to either: (1) receive a structured communication from the antimicrobial stewardship team to de-escalate antibiotics or (2) usual care.

NCT ID: NCT05971979 Recruiting - Sepsis Clinical Trials

Therapeutic Drug Monitoring - Targeting IMproved Effectiveness

TDM-TIME
Start date: December 14, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Severe infections can be caused by various organisms, such as bacteria or viruses, and lead to otherwise healthy people getting very unwell, sometimes needing treatment in hospital or even intensive care. For the treatment of bacterial infections to be successful, the correct antibiotics need to be given promptly. Early in the course of illness, clinicians often do not know exactly which bacteria are causing the infection. Furthermore, patients differ in terms of how their bodies process the antibiotics they are given; this means that some may get too much and others too little. This can in turn lead to some patients not being fully cured, and others coming to harm due to side effects of higher doses of these drugs. For certain types of antibiotics, clinicians are able to measure their levels in the bloodstream, which can help guide dosing. This is called therapeutic drug monitoring, and is commonly used in clinical practice. One of the problems with therapeutic drug monitoring is that it is often not available outside of regular working hours, is costly, and most importantly, provides clinicians with useful information only after a few days of treatment have already been completed. This may be too late to treat these severely ill patients with life-threatening infections, where early and appropriate treatments matter. The aim of our study, called TDM-TIME, is to look at how long it takes for blood samples to get from the patient to the laboratory to be measured, with the results then communicated back to clinicians. We are further looking to investigate whether steps can be taken to improve these timings, which would lead to shorter times until treatments can be improved. As our study is observational, we will not change anything about the treatment of our patients, but will only be measuring levels of antibiotics in their blood.

NCT ID: NCT05962606 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Community-acquired Pneumonia

Safety and Efficacy of AON-D21 in Severe Community-Acquired Pneumonia.

Start date: February 2, 2024
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare the safety and efficacy of AON-D21 versus placebo, both on top of standard of care, in patients with severe community acquired pneumonia admitted to ICU (or similar unit). The main questions to answer are: - The safety and tolerability of AON-D21 vs placebo. - The efficacy of AON-D21vs placebo. - The pharmacokinetics of AON-D21. - The pharmacodynamics of AON D21. - To identify biomarkers for patient stratification and analyses in future trials.

NCT ID: NCT05960383 Recruiting - Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Molecular vs Conventional Microbiologic Diagnosis for Infections in Lung Transplantation

PNEUMOARRAY
Start date: February 2, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this prospective study is to compare rapid molecular technique BioFire Pneumonia Panel Filmarray and conventional culture-based methods in the microbiologic diagnosis on bronchoalveolar lavage of lung transplant patients. The main questions it aims to answer are: - determine the microbiological concordance between molecular diagnostic and conventional culture techniques on donor's bronchoalveolar lavage before lung transplantation - determine the microbiological concordance between molecular diagnostic and conventional culture techniques on recipient's bronchoalveolar lavage, performed 72 hours after lung transplantation - determine the microbiological concordance between molecular diagnostic and conventional culture techniques in detecting molecular resistance patterns - determine the difference in time to microbiological results between molecular diagnostic and conventional culture techniques - determine time to clinical decision based on molecular diagnostic techniques compared to conventional culture techniques