View clinical trials related to RSV Infection.
Filter by:RSV infection is a leading cause of medical care in older adults, sometimes leading to hospital admission and severe outcomes. Although the majority of RSV infections are managed outside hospitals, little is known on the burden of RSV in older adults in the primary care setting. Accurate estimates of the RSV burden in primary care is particularly relevant since vaccines against RSV infection in older adults will likely become available for the general population soon. The use of high-quality point-of-care (POC) molecular viral diagnostics allows to identify RSV infected older adults and would therefore contribute to fill one of the most important gaps in knowledge facilitating implementation of RSV vaccination of older adults With this prospective, observational study, we aim to define the disease burden of RSV infection in older adults in the primary care setting.
The main objective is to estimate the annual symptomatic incidence of Bordetella pertussis and RSV infections in patients aged 18 years and over with asthma, which will be identified by PCR, for Bordetella pertussis and by PCR for RSV performed at a specific timepoint from onset of symptoms for each symptomatic Acute Respiratory Infection (ARI). A multicentre prospective cohort study will be undertaken in Spain. Thirty-five centres from different autonomous communities in Spain will participate in the study. Participants will be asked to report to the investigator if they experience an asthma exacerbation or symptoms of acute respiratory infection with 2 years follow up
This prospective, single-centre, open-label, randomized study aims to determine whether coordinated care in administering protective vaccinations (against Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) and influenza) impacts the prognosis of patients with chronic heart failure. The main question it aims to answer is: • Does coordinated care through vaccinations improve the prognosis of patients with chronic heart failure?
A longitudinal observational study based on routinely collected data on hospital and health care use for RSV infections will be undertaken. The Galician public health registries will be used for data collection including baseline information and follow-up data. Historical data will be retrieved for comparison purposes. The study aims to observe and analyze data from all the eligible children in Galicia for nirsevimab treatment. The number of eligible children is expected to be approximately 14,000 per each RSV season.
A randomized, Phase 2a, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to evaluate the safety, pharmacokinetics and antiviral activity of multiple doses of orally administered EDP-323 in healthy subjects infected with RSV-A Memphis 37b. This study is designed to assess the antiviral effect of EDP-323 compared to a placebo control in the respiratory syncytial virus challenge model.
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase Ib/IIa study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, efficacy, pharmacokinetics, and immunogenicity of XW001 inhalation in children with RSV infection in China
This is a comparative prospective diagnostic accuracy study reported according to the STARD guidelines. Citizens at an outpatient COVID19 test facility at Testcenter Danmark Valby will be invited to participate in the study on a volunteer basis. The enrolled participants will have the planned oropharyngeal swab performed in the test center and sent for a SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR test at TestCenter Danmark, Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark as usual. Besides the planned oropharyngeal swab performed in the test center, the participants will have additional specimens collected in form of saliva, nasopharyngeal-, nasal-, and oropharyngeal swabs. These will all be used for the detection of nucleic acids from the four most common strains of influenza (B Yamagata, B Victoria, A H1N1 and A H3N2), SARS-CoV-2 and RSV A/B. Further we will measure immune mediating cytokines, chemokines, and interleukins in the different specimens. These analyses will be performed at Technical University of Denmark (DTU).
The goal of this observational study is to evaluate new non-invasive passive surveillance technologies, Level 42 AI imPulse™ Una and TOR devices for the detection of COVID-19, Flu, and/or RSV in asymptomatic and symptomatic individuals over age of 18 undergoing COVID-19, Flu, and/or RSV screening and testing at BAMC Ft Sam Houston, TX; with and without COVID-19, Flu, and/or RSV. The hypotheses are: (H1) The imPulseTM Una and the imPulseTM TOR e-stethoscopes have at least a similar discriminative and detection ability among symptomatic and asymptomatic COVID-19 carrier versus those not infected compared to gold standard RT-PCR. We will operationalize and deploy both the imPulseTM Una and imPulseTM TOR e-stethoscope into DoD use-cases and compare their usability between the devices. (H2) Identify if the imPulseTM Una and the imPulseTM TOR e-stethoscopes have at least a similar discriminative and detection ability among symptomatic and asymptomatic Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV), Influenza and Long COVID carriers versus those not infected compared to gold standard Rapid RSV and Flu Antigen Tests, or RT-PCR and molecular assays. We will operationalize and deploy both the imPulseTM Una and imPulseTM TOR e-stethoscope into DoD use-cases and compare their captured traces in the early identification of disease/illness analyzed by the devices built in algorithms. (H3) In the mid to long-term, this approach will also be explored as a diagnostic system to explore pursue the physical (structural and mechanical) properties of cells and tissues that maintain normal cell behavior (motility, growth, apoptosis), and the critical importance of the ability of cells to sense and respond to mechanical stresses, which will be operationally critical for assessment of both traumatic and unconventional exposures in austere environments. Participants will: - Be consented; - Be screened for COVID-19, Flu, and/or RSV symptoms according to BAMC's current screening procedures; - Have study data collected; - Complete a symptoms questionnaire; - imPulseTM Una and TOR e-stethoscopes examination will be conducted; - Participants will be compensated for completing all study requirements. (Active-Duty personnel must complete the study procedures while off-duty in order to receive compensation.)
Approximately 8% of all births occur between 30-36 weeks of gestation ('moderate-late' prematurity). Respiratory tract infections (RTI) and wheezing illnesses disproportionally affect preterm infants resulting in a 1.5-2 fold higher hospitalisation rate during the first years of life compared to term born children. Besides prematurity, several other postnatal modifiable influencing factors are associated with increased risk of respiratory morbidity and impaired pulmonary development. These factors include RTI, rapid weight gain, air pollution, tobacco smoke exposition, vitamin D deficiency, maternal stress and antibiotic usage. The investigators hypothesize that a follow-up program aiming at prevention of modifiable influencing factors can reduce respiratory morbidity in moderate and late prematurity. Objectives: To reduce respiratory disease burden in moderate-late preterm infants in the first 18 months of life
This is a Phase 2b, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of EDP-938 administered orally for the treatment of non-hospitalized adult subjects with confirmed RSV infection who are at high risk for complications after RSV infection.