View clinical trials related to SARS-CoV2 Infection.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine whether trained medical detection dogs can accurately detect the presence of COVID-19 in people infected with the virus, or using samples of their clothing or body odour. The study will train dogs to identify and discriminate between individuals wearing clothing collected from people infected with SARS-CoV-2 and uninfected individuals under semi-field conditions.Following this training, field testing will be used to determine whether trained dogs can distinguish between people infected with SARS-CoV-2 and uninfected individuals, producing estimates of dogs' sensitivity and specificity.
Hip fracture in the elderly is a worldwide public health issue and a medical challenge for early postoperative rehabilitation. More than 2 million people are treated annually with an annual incidence between 100 and 300/100,000 (USA, Europe, China), resulting in a cost of billion dollars and a strain on most surgical facilities. In this context, an early surgical management of patient with fracture within the first 24-48h has been shown to reduce morbidity, length of hospital stay and mortality. During the Covid-19 pandemics, a higher risk of 30-day mortality has been reported in patients with pre-operative SARS-CoV-2 infection diagnosed 0-2 weeks, 3-4 weeks and 5-6 weeks before surgery compared with patients who did not have a pre-operative SARS-CoV-2 infection. However, this risk seems to disappear in patients diagnosed with SARS-CoV-2 ≥ 7 weeks before surgery. These findings led to propose delayed elective surgery when the benefit-risk ratio was acceptable (cancer, cardiac surgeries). However, delaying surgery in COVID-19 patients (with high risk of immune and thrombotic disorders) with hip fracture could be questionable as the risk related to COVID-19 could be counteracted by the risk delayed surgery. For assessing the mortality risk related to hip fracture surgery associated with COVID-19, we decided to use the French national hospital discharge records database for comparing the 30-day postoperative mortality in patients with hip fracture and with or without an hospitalization for SARS-COV-2 infection in the 30 previous days before surgery.
The primary goal is to detect Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome CoronaVirus 2 (SARS-CoV2) urine viral particles in patients in intensive care units, hospitalized for coronavirus Coronavirus Disease-19 (COVID-19) infection, and correlate the presence of the virus in the urine with proximal tubular dysfunction (defined by the association of at least 2 abnormalities: tubular proteinuria, renal phosphate leak, uricosuria, normoglycemic glycosuria, amino aciduria)
Coverage Africa is a nested study in the large Anticov platform trial that aims to generate data on new early treatment strategies for mild/moderate COVID-19 patients in resource-limited-settings to reduce the number progressing to severe forms requiring hospitalization, thereby relieving the burden on health care systems and contributing to "flattening the curve" in contexts where none pharmaceutical intervention such as quarantine are difficult to implement in large urban settings. Treating early when the virus is still present might also limit transmission. Coverage Africa will be conducted in Guinea and Burkina Faso. The main objective is to conduct an open-label, multicenter, randomized, adaptive platform trial to test the safety and efficacy of several marketed products, including antiviral therapies versus control in mild/moderate of coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) in resource-limited-settings. The study aims to recruit 600 patients in both countries, one site in Guinea and two sites in Burkina Faso. The current assessed treatments are now the association of Fluoxétine/Budésonide compared with a control arm: paracetamol. The adaptive design trial will allow for the removal of drugs, or the addition of new study arms when new data becomes available. Data on the primary efficacy parameters and safety will be integrated with the primary endpoint based on an oxygen saturation percentage (SpO2) ≤ 93% or death within 14 days after randomization to treatment, including death for any reason. Study will run until August 2022. However, with the proposed adaptive design, the study could also be interrupted for success earlier than planned with the identification of a treatment that significantly reduces hospitalization rate as evidence by results from the primary endpoint.
The study is designed to evaluate the safety, reactogenicity and immunogenicity of three groups ages ≤18 - >12, ≤12 ->6, ≤ 6 - >2 years of healthy volunteers who receive two doses of the whole virion inactivated SARS-CoV-2 virus vaccine (COVAXIN®) 28 days apart. Data will be un-blinded to the third party bio-statistician and an interim analysis will be performed on day 56 for Immunogenicity, Safety and submitted to CDSCO.
Primary purpose: To investigate the effect of propolis, a food supplement product, on healing parameters in patients with COVID 19. Secondary purpose: To provide a new supportive treatment in Covid 19 treatment. In the present study to examine the effect of the use of propolis on healing parameters (laboratory and imaging) in patients with COVID 19; Propolis, which has antiviral properties, has also been used in humans in the COVID19 pandemic as of 2020. However, in these studies, an alcohol-soluble extract of propolis was used. Despite the disadvantages of its use in alcohol, it is clear that water and olive oil extracts of Propolis are safer for humans. Therefore, water extracts of propolis will be used in the study.
For an antiviral agent to act as an effective biological barrier on nasal mucosal surface, the formulation preferably has to be maintained on the site of action for several hours, and the nasal spray dispenser can be utilized for administering the solution to the upper respiratory tract. A "first-in-man" clinical study of the nasal spray containing anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies derived from bovine colostrum was conducted. The study on healthy volunteers was undertaken to evaluate how long the bovine antibodies would be maintained on the nasopharyngeal surface after administration of nasal spray. In addition, the study enabled to determine which of the two concentrations of antibodies should be used in the final nasal-spray formulation. The volunteers were followed up for 4h after administration of antibody spray and sampling was done at different time-points during this period. The concentration of antibodies from patient samples was measured using ELISA analysis. In addition, as this was a "first-in-man" study any adverse events following the administration of spray were also monitored.
The world is currently facing a crisis because of this potentially fatal situation of the COVID-19 epidemic without proven efficacy for any drug treatment, while the vaccination is not yet. This epidemic is caused by a new betacorona virus, now called SARS-CoV-2. The most common symptoms reported are fever, cough or chest tightness, and dyspnea. Most cases have a mild course
To evaluate the analytical and clinical sensitivity and specificity of antigen tests performed as oropharyngeal swabs, outer nasal swabs, saliva swabs or breath tests including self-tests for SARS-CoV-2 towards standard RT-PCR testing. For each test 200 SARS-CoV-2 positive and 200 SARS-CoV-2 negative individuals previously defined by RT-PCR are tested. When tested an additional RT-PCR test is performed to verify status. Analytical sensitivity and specificity is determined on 210 SARS-CoV-2 positive samples with known Cq and 100 SARS-CoV-2 negative samples. 30 companies with a total of 55 tests participate in this nationwide study.
The primary objective of the Outpatient Treatment with Anti-Coronavirus Immunoglobulin (OTAC) (INSIGHT 012) trial is to compare the safety and efficacy of a single infusion of anti-COVID-19 hyperimmune intravenous immunoglobulin (hIVIG) versus placebo among adults with recently diagnosed severe acute respiratory syndrome - coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV2) infection who do not require hospitalization. The primary endpoint of this double-blind randomized trial is a five-category ordinal outcome that assesses the participant's clinical status seven days after the infusion of hIVIG or placebo. 1. Asymptomatic and no limitations in usual activity due to COVID-19 2. Mild COVID-19 illness or minor limitations to usual activity 3. Moderate COVID-19 illness and with major limitations to usual activity 4. Severe COVID-19 or serious disease manifestation from COVID-19 5. Critical illness from COVID-19 or Death Two strata of participants will be identified for analysis purposes. Stratum 2 will be participants who receive direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) or other anti-SARS-CoV2 agents that are approved/available and recommended for use as part of standard of care (SOC), estimated to be about 20% of participants. Stratum 1 will be participants who do not receive this agents, estimated to be about 80% of participants.