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Severe Pneumonia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06114784 Recruiting - Severe Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Microbiome and Host Susceptibility in Severe Pneumonia, a Prospective, Multicenter, Cohort Study

MASS
Start date: September 25, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study was a prospective multicenter cohort of severe pneumonia. And by collecting clinical samples to clarify the correlation between lung microbiome, intestinal microbiome, host susceptibility, and prognosis of severe pneumonia patients.

NCT ID: NCT05768204 Recruiting - Severe Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Research on the Treatment of Severe Community-acquired Pneumonia in Children

Start date: March 10, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The need for glucocorticoid therapy in children with severe community-acquired pneumonia in the acute phase of the disease remains unclear. The implementation of this study could provide strong evidence on the need for adjuvant glucose therapy in children with severe community-acquired pneumonia.

NCT ID: NCT05663905 Completed - Critical Illness Clinical Trials

Efficacy of Intravenous Amboxol Hydrochloride as an Adjunct Therapy for Severe Pneumonia in Critically Ill Patients

Start date: January 7, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Ambroxol is a mucolytic containing an active N-desmethyl metabolite of bromhexine. It is approved by both the U.S. FDA and EMA to be marketed under several formulations including oral, nasal, oro-mucosal, rectal and intravenous formulations. One of ambroxol's authorized use is for the treatment of bronchopulmonary infections. In addition, it has been found over the decades to have other multi-pronged properties such as local anaesthesia, anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant effects. It also stimulates surfactant production in Type II pneumocytes, thus preventing atelectasis in pneumonia. Ambroxol has demonstrated a wide safety profile and is an extensively studied drug in terms of safety with the commonest side effects being skin rashes, allergies, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and dyspepsia. Severe pneumonia is is defined by the American Thoracic Society (ATS) as pneumonia that requires ICU admission and specifically fulfils one of two major criteria, or three out of nine minor criteria as per recommended in the latest ATS guideline. This study aims to investigate the effects of using intravenous ambroxol as an adjunct therapy on the resolution of severe pneumonia. The improvements in modified Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score (CPIS) will be used as a surrogate for resolution of severe pneumonia. Modified CPIS is a clinical score of 0-12 based on 6 clinical features: volume and character of tracheal secretions, chest radiograph infiltrates, body temperature, leukocyte count, oxygenation index, and microbiology results. Traditionally, CPIS score has been used to facilitate the diagnosis of VAP where a cut-off point of >6 is used to denote possible pneumonia. Interestingly, Luna et al has found that serial improvements in CPIS score can be successfully used as a surrogate for pneumonia resolution with good correlation with eventual survivability. This study will also explore the effects of using ambroxol on other clinical outcomes of patients with severe pneumonia, including ICU mortality, duration of ICU stay, length of mechanical ventilation and incidence of reintubation within 48 hours. If this adjunct treatment is able to reduce duration of ICU stay and length of MV, it will not only directly impact the patients' short & long term outcomes but will also confer logistical benefits in terms of saving resources and reducing healthcare economic burden while optimizing ICU turnover rates.

NCT ID: NCT05158842 Completed - Covid19 Clinical Trials

Treatment of COVID-19 Positive/Negative Bangladeshi Adults With Severe Respiratory Complaints by a Locally Made bCPAP: Feasibility Study

Adult-bCPAP
Start date: October 8, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Low and middle-income countries (LMICs) urgently need cost-effective adaptive technologies to provide CPAP. The lead investigator has designed a device that has already been approved by the Directorate General of Drug Administration (DGDA), Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh. The design of the nasal seal was comfortable and well tolerated by all the participants. Patients were told about some mild discomfort at higher delivered pressures (14 or 15 cm PEEP), consistent with pressurised nasal delivery by similar devices. The safety phase has been initiated since 1st November 2020 and ended in April 2021. One patient withdrew from the study but none of them developed any adverse events. The feasibility phase started at the end of September 2021. Objectives: 1. To evaluate the barriers and operational challenges related to the introduction of adult bubble CPAP oxygen therapy 2. To evaluate the acceptability of introducing adult bubble CPAP in tertiary level hospitals of Bangladesh

NCT ID: NCT05143593 Not yet recruiting - Severe Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Species-specific Bacterial Detector for Fast Pathogen Diagnosis of Severe Pneumonia

Start date: July 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is a multicenter randomized controlled trial. The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy of the combination of PCR and CRISPR/Cas12a (SSBD)in tract secretion from lower respiratory for early targeted anti-infective therapy for patients with severe pneumonia. 5 adult ICU units from 5 hospitals in Jiangsu province participate the study and the hosted unit is the Department of Critical Care Medicine, Affiliated Drum Tower Hospital of Nanjing University Medical College. All patients are randomly assigned to the experiment group and the control group. For experiment group, the combined detection of PCR andCRISPR/Cas12a is carried out in the early stage, and the antibiotic scheme is changed base on the results of PCR-CRISPR/Cas12a. The patients in the control group are adjusted according to the traditional microbial detection methods. Some clinical parameters and outcomes are recorded.

NCT ID: NCT04955756 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Acute Respiratory Infection

Early Identification and Severity Prediction of Acute Respiratory Infectious Disease

ESAR
Start date: April 4, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Early identification and Severity prediction of Acute Respiratory infectious disease has become a top priority for clinicians at department of infectious and respiratory diseases after COVID-19 broke out. This is a multicenter, prospective, and randomized study, which aims to figure out the best way of early identification and severity prediction of acute respiratory infectious diseases. Patients with suspected acute respiratory infectious diseases will be enrolled into this study and received two different diagnostic pathways.

NCT ID: NCT04882436 Recruiting - Severe Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Construction of Special Disease Cohort Database and Biological Sample Holographic Database of Severe Pneumonia

Start date: April 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The incidence rate and mortality of lung infection are high worldwide. It is a common and frequently occurring disease which seriously threatens human health. Severe pneumonia accounts for 18-36% of all pneumonia. Severe pneumonia has caused serious economic and medical burden. Therefore, it is urgent to carry out the real-world cohort study of severe pneumonia. Big data and sample library will provide useful clinical guidance and scientific research reserves for clinicians. Through further research, we can improve the treatment success rate and reduce the mortality. The purpose of this study is to provide reliable biological samples and related data information for the relevant basic and clinical trials in the field of severe pneumonia by carrying out the construction of special disease cohort database and biological sample holographic database, and to establish a long-term sharing platform for the transformation of research results into clinical practice, improve the prognosis of severe pneumonia,and provide the evidence for improving the diagnosis and treatment of severe pneumonia suitable for China's national conditions.

NCT ID: NCT04794803 Terminated - Severe Pneumonia Clinical Trials

Reparixin in COVID-19 Pneumonia - Efficacy and Safety

Start date: May 5, 2020
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

- Phase 2 Study Objectives: efficacy and safety of of Reparixin treatment as compared to the control arm in adult patients with severe COVID-19 pneumonia - Phase 3 Study Objectives: efficacy and safety of Reparixin treatment as compared to the control arm in adult patients with moderate or severe COVID-19 pneumonia

NCT ID: NCT04457505 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

One Year Follow-ups of Patients Admitted to Spanish Intensive Care Units Due to COVID-19

Start date: May 8, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The latest epidemiological data published from Chine reports that up to 30% of hospital-admitted patients required admission to intensive care units (ICU). The cause for ICU admission for most patients is very severe respiratory failure; 80% of the patients present with severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (SARS) that requires protective mechanical ventilation. Five percent of patients with SARS require extracorporeal circulation (ECMO) techniques. Global mortality data has been thus far reported in different individual publications from China. Without accounting for those patients still admitted to hospital, bona fide information (from a hospital in Wuhan) received by the PI of this project estimates that mortality of hospitalized patients is more than 10%. Evidently, mortality is concentrated in patients admitted to the ICU and those patients who require mechanical ventilation and present with SARS. As data in China was globally reported, risk factors and prognosis of patients with and without SARS who require mechanical ventilation are not definitively known. The efficacy of different treatments administered empirically or based on small, observation studies is also not known. With many still admitted at the time of publication, a recent study in JAMA about 1500 patients admitted to the ICU in the region of Lombardy (Italy) reported a crude mortality rate of 25%. The data published until the current date is merely observational, prospective or retrospective. Data has not been recorded by analysis performed with artificial intelligence (machine learning) in order to report much more personalized results. Furthermore, as it concerns patients admitted to the ICU who survive, respiratory and cardiovascular consequences, as well as quality of living are completely unknown. The study further aims to investigate quality of life and different respiratory and cardiovascular outcomes at 6 months, as well as crude mortality within 1 year after discharge of patients with COVID-19 who survive following ICU admission. Lastly, with the objective to help personalize treatment in accordance with altered biological pathways in each patient, two types of studies will be performed: 1) epigenetics and 2) predictive enrichment of biomarkers in plasma. Hypothesis - A significant percentage of patients (20%) admitted to the hospital with COVID-19 infection is expected to require ICU admission, and need mechanical ventilation (80%) and, in a minor percentage (5%), ECMO. - Patients who survive an acute episode during ICU hospitalization will have a yearly accumulated mortality of 40%. Those who then survive will have respiratory consequences, cardiovascular complications and poor quality of life (6 months).

NCT ID: NCT04395066 Not yet recruiting - Diagnosis Clinical Trials

Molecular Diagnosis and Prognosis of Severe Pulmonary Infection Immunosuppressed Hosts

Start date: June 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Serious pneumonia is a serious inflammation of the lungs caused by various pathogens, resulting in severe bacteraemia or toxemia, which in turn causes blood pressure drop, shock, blurred consciousness, restlessness, delirium and coma, etc., and requires intensive care and treatment in intensive care unit (ICU) because of its seriousness. There is an upward trend in the number of clinically immunosuppressed host patients, including long-term use of glucocorticoids for rheumatoid immune diseases and kidney diseases, tumor chemotherapy, organ transplantation, etc. A huge risk for these patients is the diagnosis and treatment of infections, especially lung infections. We have previously observed a significant increase in mortality from severe pneumonia in immunosuppressed patients, and our recent analysis of 204 patients with novel coronavirus pneumonia found that low lymphatic counts, immunosuppression, etc. were independent risk factors for death in patients. Early diagnosis and timely treatment are the main means to reduce the mortality rate of severe pneumonia. CD55 is an important complement regulatory protein that inhibits C3 and C5 activation by blocking the formation and accelerating the decay of new C3 and C5 convertases, both of which mediate the downstream action of all three complement activation pathways, and CD55 protects host cells from complement attack. Our previous study found that CD55 was significantly elevated in patients with severe pneumonia. Therefore, this project proposes "Early diagnosis of severe pneumonia based on combination of biomarkers with new generation pathogenesis and early clinical manifestations". It is proposed to validate the predictive effects of recently discovered markers such as CD55, HBP and CD64 on severe pneumonia through prospective single-center clinical studies, explore the establishment of new predictive models for early diagnosis of severe pneumonia, and optimize the diagnosis and treatment strategy of severe pneumonia, and provide new ideas for accurate treatment of severe pneumonia.