View clinical trials related to Streptococcus Pneumonia.
Filter by:The 'Experimental Human Pneumococcal challenge' (EHPC) model is a way of putting drops of bacteria into the nose. Investigators have studied this model of putting bacteria in the nose safely in over 1500 volunteers over the past decade with no serious side effects and now want to test the model using a different strain of the bacteria that is commonly found in the community, SPN3. The aim of this study is to determine how much pneumococcus is needed to achieve nasal colonisation and how long the bacteria live in the nose for before natural immune responses eradicate them. By doing this, Investigators will then be able to test how well future vaccines prevent colonisation with pneumococcus. Investigators want to learn more about how the immune system responds to nasal colonisation with pneumococcus, again to help with development of new vaccines.
The purpose of this research is to conduct a multi-center prospective surveillance study focusing upon pneumococcal carriage and serotype epidemiology in patients with otitis media (OM).The data generated will be crucial especially as baseline data for future assessments on the long-term impacts of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine 10 (PCV10) coverage, compared to that of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine 13 (PCV13) that is being used in the majority of other countries. Pneumococcal carriage in patients with OM and serotype distribution will be assessed, including changes in antibiotic resistance. With the establishment of sentinel surveillance in the country, we hope to provide detailed data on the epidemiology of OM in Malaysia; working towards the development of a national surveillance programme for the monitoring of OM burden in the country.
To determine the effect of PCV-13 and PPV-23 vaccination versus control on experimental pneumococcal colonisation of 2 clades of serotypes 3 and 6B at 1 month and 6 months post vaccination respectively, using the EHPC model.
As Covid 19 manifestations that have been recently described, inflammatory manifestation have major impact in infectious disease lesions. Some of them are delayed and provide Post infectious inflammatory reaction (PIIR), they are challenging for diagnosis and for management. Clinician have to avoid unnecessary antibiotic thearapy and in if necessary have to give immunosuppressive therapy. Except for rheumatic disease for group A streptococcus (GAS) infections there are not stanrdized diagnostic criteria and therapeutic protocol, and PIIR have probably a suboptimal management. In this context the investigators aim to explore PIIR in the 3 most frequent bacterial invasive infection in France, by a retrospective monocentric study. The investigators include all children betwwen 2012 and 2018 hospitalized for infections by Streptococcus pneumoniae (SP), Neisseria meningitidis (NM), and GAS invasive infections.