View clinical trials related to Scrub Typhus.
Filter by:There is enough evidence to suggest that scrub typhus and spotted fever group rickettsioses are common causes of febrile illness in India. Serological evidence also exists for murine typhus, but is rarely tested for. Incidence, risk factors, clinical features and molecular epidemiology of these three infections are poorly understood. Delays in disease recognition and treatment may cause thousands of preventable deaths across India. The objectives of the research are to determine the incidence and risk factors of scrub typhus, spotted fever and murine typhus by severity, to determine clinical features of these neglected and often unrecognized infections. Further to study the effect of previous infection on incidence and severity of subsequent infections. Finally to study the association between vector parameters and scrub typhus risk. Enrolled will be 30,000 individuals who will be followed up for the development of fever using active and passive surveillance. Active surveillance will include household screening every 3-6 weeks. Fever cases occuring in the past two months will be tested for Scrub typhus, murine typhus and spotted fever IgG/IgM. 4000 individuals will be followed up by annual serological testing to identify asymptomatic infections. Participants notifying the study team with ongoing fever will undergo blood testing for acute diagnosis of rickettsial infection (IgM, PCR). In addition, we will enroll fever cases at study clinics who are not part of the main cohort. The research includes spatial and socio-economic risk factor analysis. Rodents carrying mite larvae will be trapped to compare the intensity of mite infestation between areas of high and low risk for human scrub typhus. The data on incidence, burden of disease and environmental determinants of scrub typhus, spotted fever and murine typhus will be used for health care planning and information campaigns for the public and medical professionals.
Scrub typhus infection has been considered as seasonal and endemic infectious disorder with benign feature. However, the increasing mortality rate of scrub typhus has been recently reported in Southeast Asia and cause of death could be a fetal complicating cardiovascular disease. Therefore, the association and predictors for scrub typhus induced cardiovascular disease should be investigated to provide a timely and appropriate diagnosis and to reduce the mortality rate of complicated scrub typhus infection. Therefore, investigators prospectively investigate the association and predictors of cardiovascular disease in the participants with scrub typhus infection.
Fever is one of most common presenting complaints in clinics in tropical countries. Rickettsial infections, enteric fever and leptospirosis are common and important causes of undifferentiated fever in Southeast Asia. Scrub typhus is caused by Orientia tsutsugamushi and humans are typically infected by a bite of an infected chigger (trombiculid mite larva). Clinical diagnosis is unreliable for identifying scrub typhus, unless a tick eschar is present which is almost pathognomonic for the disease in Southeast Asia. A combination of culture, paired serology and PCR has been proposed as the gold-standard method for detection. As a result laboratory confirmation is not widely available and the diagnosis is missed frequently in clinical practice. Some progress has been made in developing such a test and one promising candidate is the Scrub Typhus Detect IgM Rapid Test (InBios International Inc). We plan to use to this test in this study to estimate the prevalence of scrub typhus in selected febrile patients presenting to clinics in Myanmar . Patients will be followed up for one week to check for resolution of symptoms.
Study type: Randomized Control Treatment Trial Study population: Male and female patients with ≥15 years of age and acute scrub typhus Duration: 2 years Study Design: Prospective, open-label, randomized-controlled treatment trial in patients ≥15 years old admitted to hospital with acute scrub typhus. Randomization into 3 oral treatment arms (each n=59 patients, total n=177): i) 7 days of doxycycline, ii) 3 days of doxycycline, and iii) 3 days of azithromycin Primary Objective: To evaluate the clinical and microbiological responses in scrub typhus patients to three oral treatment regimens: 7 days of doxycycline, 3 days of doxycycline, and 3 days of azithromycin Secondary Objectives: 1. To perform pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamics (PK/PD) characterization of the therapeutic responses for doxycycline and azithromycin, incl. serial bacterial load measurements. 2. To define clinical, bacterial, pathophysiological and pharmacological factors associated with disease severity, fever-clearance times (FCT), treatment failures and relapse/re-infection. 3. To determine the minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of clinical Orientia tsutsugamushi isolates to doxycycline, azithromycin and chloramphenicol, using in vitro growth-inhibition assays 4. To genotype all clinical isolates using whole genome sequencing for comparative genomics. 5. To dissect the natural immune response in scrub typhus, using antigen-specific cellular immune and antibody studies, and cytokine profiling
This is an observational study of patients with scrub typhus (rapid diagnostic test/quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RDT/qPCR) positive) and an inoculation eschar present on examination, recruited from Chiangrai Prachanukroh Hospital, North of Thailand. In this study, we aim to: - Investigate relevant pathogen dissemination dynamics, early innate immune response, and pathogen-host interactions in scrub typhus using a minimal set of easily accessible samples; the inoculation eschar (crust or biopsy), whole blood and - where possible - a lymph node fine-needle aspiration (FNA). - Determine the potential use of the inoculation eschar for improving early diagnostics and assessing the diversity of human pathogenic strains; by evaluating non-invasive swabs and scrapings, as well as biopsies for molecular diagnostics templates. - Dissect the underlying patho-biology associated with the inoculation eschar and in a subgroup, including the draining lymph node; by defining the spectrum of infected cells via microscopy and double-immune labeling; by determining cytokine and RNA gene expression profiles in blood peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMCs) and eschar samples. Data sharing: No future analysis or study of legacy data/specimens including data sharing for purposes not specified in the protocol will be done without seeking further regulatory (EC/IRB) approval - Any requests for data sharing will be considered by MORU's data sharing committee - Any data subsequently shared will be anonymised and will not include personal identifiers
This study to collect and identify rodents and mites across transects through diverse habitats used by the human community from a localised area identified as a scrub typhus 'hot spot'.
This is an observational study of the natural immune response to scrub typhus in patients recruited from Chiangrai Prachanukroh Hospital, N-Thailand. Febrile patients with a positive IgM rapid diagnostic test will be asked if they wish to take part in a study to improve the understanding of how the body responds to scrub typhus. Blood samples will be collected from each participant ("STP", n=60) at baseline (the day of presentation to hospital), 2 weeks later in hospital, 12 weeks after baseline at the clinic visit and 1 year later. Data on clinical presentation and relapses will be recorded. Control subjects are scrub typhus exposed patients from a rural village in the caption area of Prachanukroh Hospital ("STE", n=80; approx. 40 children and 40 adults), and healthy adults blood donors from Bangkok ("STH" n=30) - these subjects will be enrolled for one single blood sample. The study team will also collect eschar swab specimens from STP group and a non-invasive specimen of the dark crust on the day of enrollment. Funder: Li Ka Shing Foundation [Grant C13004]
New antibiotics are required to have not only the antibacterial activity against doxycyline-resistant O. tsutsugamushi but also lower risk for resistance or any cross-resistance to others. In this prospective, open-label, randomized trial, we enroll patients with mild-to-moderate scrub typhus. We compared the efficacy and safety of a 5-day rifampin therapy with those of a 5-day doxycycline therapy at Chosun University Hospital, or one of its two community-based affiliated hospitals which are all located in southwestern Korea between 2006 and 2009.
New antibiotics are required that have antibacterial activity against doxycyline resistant O. tsutsugamushi, that can be safely used in pregnant women and children, that have a low possibility of inducing resistance and that do not induce cross resistant to other antibiotics. Telithromycin has been reported to be effective on Rickettsia, Batonella and Coxiella burnetii. Therefore, telithromycin may be considered as a substitute antibiotic that can be used safely in pregnant women and children for rickettsiosis or Orientia infection. Our study was designed to prove the clinical usefulness of telithromycin by comparing it with doxycycline for treating mild or moderate scrub typhus.