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Clinical Trial Summary

Hypervirulent and multidrug-resistant infections are associated with significant health care costs, substantial morbidity and mortality. Therefore, the rapid recognition of outbreaks and transmissions with hypervirulent and multi-drug resistant pathogen is a key priority for infection control and public health.The main goal is to implement a shared database, connecting human and veterinary microbiology laboratories, which would allow near real-time molecular epidemiology with high spatiotemporal resolution of bacterial pathogens such as transmission and outbreak surveillance between different compartments including humans, animals and the environment in Switzerland. Investigator aims to analyze already collected encoded retrospective datasets of various pathogens by combining epidemiological data and whole genome sequences from pathogens.


Clinical Trial Description

Hypervirulent and multidrug-resistant infections are associated with significant health care costs, substantial morbidity and mortality. Therefore, the rapid recognition of outbreaks and transmissions with hypervirulent and multi-drug resistant pathogen is a key priority for infection control and public health. For hospital epidemiologist, infectious disease and public health experts, and microbiologists the identification of an outbreak source is a first important step to establish effective counter-measurements. In Switzerland, the burden of pathogen transmission between humans, animals and the environment is substantial. The main goal is to implement a shared database, connecting human and veterinary microbiology laboratories, which would allow near real-time molecular epidemiology with high spatiotemporal resolution of bacterial pathogens such as transmission and outbreak surveillance between different compartments including humans, animals and the environment in Switzerland. Investigator aims to analyze already collected encoded retrospective datasets of various pathogens by combining epidemiological data and whole genome sequences from pathogens. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04172025
Study type Observational
Source University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
Contact Hans Hirsch, Prof. Dr.
Phone +41 61 32 86697
Email hans.hirsch@unibas.ch
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date September 30, 2019
Completion date December 31, 2029