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Severe Sepsis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Severe Sepsis.

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NCT ID: NCT03015454 Completed - Sepsis Clinical Trials

An Algorithm Driven Sepsis Prediction Biomarker

Start date: December 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A sepsis early warning predictive algorithm, InSight, has been developed and validated on a large, diverse patient cohort. In this prospective study, the ability of InSight to predict severe sepsis patients is investigated. Specifically, InSight is compared with a well established severe sepsis detector in the UCSF electronic health record (EHR).

NCT ID: NCT02973243 Completed - Clinical trials for Myocardial Infarction

The Vital Signs to Identify, Target, and Assess Level (VITAL) Care Study III

Start date: October 5, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

To evaluate the effect of automated recording on frequency of recorded scores, number of automated notifications and serious events.

NCT ID: NCT02960854 Completed - Severe Sepsis Clinical Trials

A Study of Nivolumab Safety and Pharmacokinetics in Patients With Severe Sepsis or Septic Shock.

Start date: December 7, 2016
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

A study to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of Nivolumab in participants with severe sepsis or septic shock.

NCT ID: NCT02820675 Completed - Sepsis Clinical Trials

Quality Improvement in Infection COntrol and Sepsis Management in MOdel Regions

icosmos
Start date: August 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The German Quality Network Sepsis is an association trying to improve quality of care for patients with sepsis, severe sepsis and septic shock or being in risc thereof. The icosmos trial investigates the impact on the use of routine data, a risk adjustment algorithm and feedback to all hospitals as well as a structured implementation for regular screening for deteriorating patients, and education on in-hospital mortality.

NCT ID: NCT02794025 Completed - Severe Sepsis Clinical Trials

The Effect of Esmolol on Clinical Prognosis of Patients With Severe Sepsis

Start date: January 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of esmolol on hemodynamic parameters,tissue perfusion and the clinical prognosis of patients with severe sepsis

NCT ID: NCT02777606 Completed - Severe Sepsis Clinical Trials

The Efficacy of Si-Ni-Tang (a Chinese Herbal Formula) for Severe Sepsis

Start date: June 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of Si-Ni-Tang (a Chinese Herbal Formula documented in Shang Han Lun) in treating severe sepsis.

NCT ID: NCT02739373 Completed - Severe Sepsis Clinical Trials

Pharmacokinetics, Safety, Tolerability and Pharmacodynamics of BMS-986189 in Healthy Subjects

Start date: April 18, 2016
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The main purpose of this study is to measure the amount of study drug (BMS-986189) in the blood and urine and to see if BMS-986189 is safe and well-tolerated in healthy people after a single dose.

NCT ID: NCT02739152 Completed - Sepsis Clinical Trials

TRIAGE: TRIage of Sepsis At emerGency dEpartment

TRIAGE
Start date: April 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Sepsis is a serious systemic disease defined as a combination of Systemic Inflammation Response Syndrome (SIRS) plus a confirmed or suspected infection. Untreated or inadequately treated cases can lead to severe sepsis or septic shock; being characterized by high mortality and morbidity. Symptoms and signs of sepsis are variable and this makes clinical recognition and assessment very difficult in particular on Emergency Department (ED) patients due to their infectious illness background and the frequent comorbidities. Also, the severity of the condition may not be apparent at initial contact with ED personnel: patients may arrive at ED with mild clinical manifestation and rapidly progress to critical illness, or rather at the opposite others have benign evolution despite a similar symptoms. In these conditions, the main challenge of ED clinicians is differentiating mild infections from life-threatening ones in the heavy workload of ED environment Objective of TRIAGE project is to identify and validate biomarkers able to predict the clinical worsening of patients freshly admitted at Emergency Department. Targeted population is adult patients freshly admitted at ED, whom blood samples will serve to validate candidate markers.

NCT ID: NCT02734550 Completed - Septic Shock Clinical Trials

(1,3)-β-D-glucan Based Diagnosis of Invasive Candida Infection in Sepsis

CandiSep
Start date: September 12, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This prospective randomized multicenter study evaluates whether the decision to prescribe antifungals guided by (1,3)-β-D-glucan in comparison to standard of care shortens time to antifungal therapy and reduces mortality in patients with severe sepsis or septic shock and a high risk of invasive candida infection.

NCT ID: NCT02655133 Completed - Septic Shock Clinical Trials

Effects on Microcirculation of IgGAM in Severe Septic/Septic Shock Patients.

Start date: January 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

IgM-enriched immunoglobulins (IgGAM; Pentaglobin ® ) are new therapy for sepsis and septic shock since they support immune system especially in case of " immunoparalysis" . However IgGAM isn't commonly prescribed, few centres use it as routine in severe infections and there aren't any guidelines to determine how and when to use them. Microcirculatory dysfunction is a crucial aspect in the pathogenesis of sepsis-induced organ dysfunction, resulting in hypoperfusion and tissue hypoxia. Unpublished clinical data suggest a beneficial effect of IgGAM at microvascular level proved with near infrared spectroscopy and Vascular occlusion test (VOT). This study is a double blind phase II prospective randomised controlled trial that will include patients admitted to the Intensive Care Unit of the University Hospital "Ospedali Riuniti" of Ancona, after no more than 24 hours from development of severe sepsis or septic shoc. Patients will be randomized into two groups (treaties and controls): patients in group of the treaties will be submitted to infusion of IgGAM conjugate (Pentaglobin ®) at dosage of 250 mg/kg IV (5 mL/kg) per day (rate of 0.4 mL/kg/h), for 72 hours. The controls will receive equal amount of physiological NaCl solution (0.9%) as placebo. Neither the patient nor the staff nurses and MD will be aware of the group and of the treatment applied. IgGAM solutions or NaCl 0.9% will be provided by the hospital pharmacy in similar bags. The remaining treatments will not be changed in any way and will be at the discretion of the doctor who's in charge of the patient. All patients of the two groups will receive the optimal therapy for their conditions, according to good medical clinical practice (GMP), with appropriate antibiotic therapy, vasoactive and infusional therapy