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Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

3 clinical studies listed.

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Active Tuberculosis

Tundra lists 3 Active Tuberculosis clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT05045391

Pulmonary Aspergillosis in Tuberculosis Patients

Pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) is the most common cause of lung destruction, contributing to coinfections development, and Aspergillosis spp. is one of the most important. Diagnosis of chronic pulmonary aspergillosis (CPA) in PTB patients is difficult due to similarity of clinical and radiological data, especially in resource-constrained settings. Differentiation of PTB patients with singling out a group with a higher Aspergillus IgG level during the initial examination will help physicians to orient to further examination of CPA. Objectives: to determine the prevalence of aspergillosis in Koch's bacillus-positive and Koch's bacillus-negative PTB patients and antifungal resistance of Aspergillus species isolates in Central Asia countries.

Gender: All

Ages: 19 Years - 90 Years

Updated: 2025-04-04

1 state

Pulmonary Tuberculoses
Aspergillosis
Old Tuberculosis
+2
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT06846645

Host Response to Infection by Direct Analysis of Leukocyte Single Cell-type Gene Expression/transcript Abundance, Direct LS-TA. a Prospective Study Will Evaluate the Performance of Direct LS-TA in Triage Febrile Patients Into Major Categories of Infections: Viral, Bacterial or Active Tuberculosis.

Febrile illness is a common condition and it is crucial to have an early triage of patients according to various aetiologies to enable appropriate treatment. Currently, most screening/diagnostic tests target the detection of pathogens, while only a few assays aim to understand the host response, and they are mostly based on a measurement of serum proteins (e.g. CRP or procalcitonin). Recently, blood transcriptome has been explored to differentiate bacterial and viral infections. However, gene expression in blood represents a composite score of gene expression of all the component cell-types present in the sample. Here, we propose to develop a rapid test that can determine gene expressions of a specified single cell type in peripheral blood (e.g., monocytes or granulocytes) as a host response biomarker to differentiate three major categories of infections that are bacterial, viral, and tuberculosis The assay is called Direct Leukocyte Single cell-type transcript abundance (TA) assay (DIRECT LS-TA) as it can directly determine the gene expression of a specified single cell-type among various other leukocyte populations directly in a peripheral blood sample. Such results signify the nature of host response according to 3 or more axes (Type I or Type II interferon signaling response or pro-inflammatory cytokine signaling) And it can be used to indicate the type of underlying infection (viral, bacterial, or active tuberculosis).

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 80 Years

Updated: 2025-03-03

Single Cell Sequencing Technology
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene Expression
+7
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT06838780

Host Response to Infection by Direct Analysis of Leukocyte Single Cell-type Gene Expression/transcript Abundance, Direct LS-TA

Febrile illness is a common condition, particularly among young patients and it is crucial to have an early triage of patients according to various aetiologies to enable appropriate treatment. Most diagnostic tests are targeted towards the detection of pathogens while other assays are mostly related to serum proteins. Blood cells transcriptome has been explored to differentiate bacterial and viral infections. Here, we propose to develop a rapid test using the host responses in terms of gene expressions of single-cell populations of peripheral leukocytes (monocytes and granulocytes) to differentiate three major categories of infections that are bacterial, viral, and tuberculosis. The assay is called Direct leukocyte single cell-type transcript abundance (TA) assay (DIRECT LS-TA) as it can directly determine the gene expression of a specified single cell-type (e.g. monocytes and granulocytes) among various leukocyte cell populations directly in a peripheral blood sample. Such results signify the nature of host response and can be used to indicate the type of infection (viral, bacterial or active tuberculosis).

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-03-03

Gene Expression
Gene Expression Profiling
Infection
+3