View clinical trials related to Prophylaxis.
Filter by:To compare the frequency of acute attack and mean pain score ( assessed by visual analog scale) among subjects using either flunarizine or amitriptyline among patients with migraine coming to tertiary care Hospital in Lahore, Pakistan. In this study 84 patients with migraine Age ranged between 18- 60 years, Both genders having 3 or more migraine attacks per month, normal systemic and neurological examination and not having taken any prophylactic medication for the last 4 months will randomly divided into two equal group of 42 subjects each.
In 2018, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) approved tafenoquine for malaria prevention. The approved tafenoquine prophylactic regimen is 600 mg loading dose (200 mg daily for 3 days) prior to travel and a weekly 200 mg maintenance dose commencing 7 days after the last loading dose. This weekly tafenoquine regimen is more convenient with potentially improved compliance than daily doxycycline or atovaquone proguanil (Malarone), the other recommended prophylactic agents by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for the prevention of malaria infections. Current assumptions are that a systemic minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of tafenoquine in plasma is 80 ng/mL in nonimmune individuals is required to prevent symptomatic breakthroughs of malaria infections. Because of tafenoquine's lengthy blood elimination half-life of 2-3 weeks, a monthly regimen of 600 mg and 800 mg of tafenoquine in individuals weighing 60 kg and 80 kg, respectively, have pharmacokinetic (PK) profiles (i.e., drug concentration versus time curves) of achieving MIC values of at least 80 ng/mL in the majority of healthy individuals. The aim of this study is to determine whether the safety and tolerability profiles in healthy participants taking monthly doses of 600 mg or 800 mg tafenoquine are comparable in the same participants taking weekly 200 mg tafenoquine. Study Hypothesis: The study hypothesis is that the frequency of tafenoquine-related safety (e.g. blood chemistries) and adverse events (AEs) in healthy participants who take a higher dose (600 mg and 800 mg) of tafenoquine monthly would be comparable to the frequency of treatment related safety and AEs in the same individuals who take weekly tafenoquine (200 mg).
This is a double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial to determine if pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with 400mg hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), taken orally once daily, for health care workers in the hospital reduces symptomatic and asymptomatic COVID-19 disease during the pandemic. 374 health care workers will be randomized at a 1:1 allocation between the intervention and placebo arms and followed for 90 days. The cumulative incidence of COVID-19 infection in the intervention group will be compared to the cumulative incidence of COVID-19 in the placebo group with relative (risk ratio and 95% CI) and absolute measures (risk difference and 95% CI).