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Tundra lists 9 Leptospirosis clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT07520279
Xpert® Tropical Fever Test on GeneXpert® Edge X System
This is a multi-site, observational, cross-sectional clinical study that includes geographically diverse sites within and outside the United States.
Gender: All
Ages: 14 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-04-09
1 state
NCT07358910
Risk Assessment of Community Spread of Multiple Endemic Infectious Diseases in a One Health Perspective
RACSMEI addresses the high burden of infectious diseases in low- and middle-income countries, including Cambodia, where limited surveillance and laboratory capacity often obscure etiologies and transmission dynamics. This knowledge gap hinders the design of effective prevention and control strategies. RACSMEI will improve understanding across multiple pathogens using a multidisciplinary One Health approach. We will answer key questions on burden, ecology, transmission and population immune status to inform targeted and culturally appropriate interventions. The project combines a nationally representative One Health survey, social-science methods, and multiplex, diverse diagnostics to efficiently test for 57 priority pathogens, including zoonotic and vector-borne agents, vaccine-preventable and elimination-targeted diseases, enteric, respiratory, and environmentally transmitted pathogens and selected neglected tropical diseases and parasites relevant to Cambodia. Mathematical modelling will reconstruct and forecast transmission dynamics and assess the potential impact of future public-health strategies. By integrating intersectoral data and innovative methods, RACSMEI will generate actionable evidence for public-health authorities, support precision One Health interventions, and help reduce disease burden in affected communities. The project also aims to ensure the transferability of methods and insights to other countries facing similar challenges.
Gender: All
Ages: 2 Years - 75 Years
Updated: 2026-01-22
1 state
NCT04288674
Leptospirosis Registry - LeptoScope
Leptospirosis is a worldwide zoonotic diseases caused by pathogenic Leptospira spp. Human are accidental hosts, who acquired infections after exposition to animal urine, contaminated water or soil, infected tissue. Incidence of invasive leptospirosis disease causing acute kidney injury, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), myocarditis, hepatic dysfunction, hemorrhage and multi-organ failure, is globally increasing and there have been frequent outbreak situation throughout the world. Due to increasing outbreak situations and globally chances in species distributions, a worldwide surveillance in epidemiology and species distribution is urgently needed. The objective of the Leptospirosis Registry - LeptoScope is to overcome the lack knowledge on epidemiology, clinical course, prognostic factors and molecular characteristics for invasive leptospirosis disease.
Gender: All
Updated: 2025-12-17
1 state
NCT07127718
Preventive Strategies for Early and Late Complications of Leptospirosis
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if complement factor I (CFI) works to predict development of complications in participants with leptospirosis. It will also learn if plasma transfusion, hemoperfusion, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation works to treat participants with leptospirosis. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does a low level of CFI predict the development of lung damage in participants with leptospirosis? * Does plasma tranfusion lower the chances of participants getting lung damage from leptospirosis? * Does hemoperfusion work to remove harmful materials from the blood of participants with leptospirosis? * Does extracorporeal membrane oxygenation increase the chance of survival in participants with lung damage? Researchers will compare plasma tranfusion and hemoperfusion to conventional therapy (standard of care for leptospirosis, including antibiotics, fluids, and other treatment that the doctor deems necessary) to see if these novel therapies work to treat leptospirosis. Participants will: * Give blood samples for the study of CFI * Receive conventional therapy and/or plasma transfusion for 4 times in 2 days, OR * Receive conventional therapy and/or hemoperfusion for at least 3 days, AND/OR * Receive extracorporeal membrane oxygenation if their condition worsens
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 60 Years
Updated: 2025-08-17
1 state
NCT05425524
Leptospirosis Care Bundle Study
So in management of Leptospirosis patients There really is no another approach to treatment. The importance of the problem was acknowledged by the researchers. As a result, this study was performed in order to The Leptospirosis Care Bundle has been used, and has been proved that its use can reduce the risk of acute renal failure.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-08-07
1 state
NCT06945822
Characterizing the Host Response to Leptospirosis for Better Diagnosis and Prognosis - NIHFI
Leptospirosis is a zoonosis found worldwide, but particularly in humid subtropical and tropical zones. It is caused by pathogenic bacteria of the Leptospira species of the spirochete family. It is estimated that there are over a million cases of leptospirosis worldwide each year, with 60,000 deaths. These figures place leptospirosis among the most dangerous bacterial zoonoses in the world. The disease affects the most disadvantaged populations, and also inflicts its burden on domestic and farm animals. To this day, however, leptospirosis remains a neglected disease, poorly understood because it has been little studied. Human leptospirosis initially presents as a febrile syndrome, with fever, headache, myalgia and joint pain. These symptoms are very similar to those observed in influenza, dengue fever and other acute febrile illnesses, making diagnosis very difficult. Delayed initiation of antibiotic therapy, a treatment recommended by the WHO, is associated with the development of severe forms of leptospirosis. Indeed, in 10% of cases, leptospirosis evolves into severe forms, which are still poorly described, but which result in haemorrhage, multivisceral failure (lungs, kidneys, liver) and a drastic increase in the case-fatality rate. In 2023, 152 cases of leptospirosis were reported in New Caledonia. Of these, 130 people (85%) were hospitalized and 4 deaths were recorded (2.6%). For patients suffering from leptospirosis, it is therefore important to be able to make the diagnosis quickly, ideally as soon as symptoms appear. It is also crucial to be able to monitor, or even prevent, the development of severe forms of the disease, to ensure optimal patient care.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-04-25
NCT06859619
Serological Measurement of Montpellier Professionals' Contacts with Infectious Agents Responsible for Animal-borne Diseases
Zoonoses and arboviroses refer to a group of diseases transmitted from animals to humans, either directly or indirectly (via mosquitoes, ticks or contact with contaminated environments). Most of these diseases are found in certain tropical zones, but global warming and increased international trade are modifying their geographical distribution, with a gradual trend towards temperate regions. A number of these pathogens have already been detected in Occitania, including dengue fever, West Nile, leishmaniasis and Q fever. Given the region's high mosquito population and favorable climatic conditions, other zoonoses have a strong potential to appear in the region, or may already be circulating at a low level. The study focuses on 18 pathogens selected for their potential to emerge and establish themselves in the Occitanie region: Leishmaniasis, Leptospirosis, Brucellosis, Q fever, Rickettsiosis, Tularemia, Psittacosis, Lyme disease, Tick-borne encephalitis, Hantavirus, Hepatitis E virus, Dengue virus, Zika virus, Chikungunya virus, West-Nile virus, Usutu virus, Toscana virus, Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever virus. The aim of the study is to find out whether patients have antibodies against these infectious agents, which would indicate that they have been exposed to them in the past, even in the absence of symptoms. Describing the circulation of these pathogens will enable to implement appropriate public health measures to avoid the risk of epidemics (mosquito control, informing professionals, etc.), as well as to assess the risk incurred in the workplace and have this risk recognized by the healthcare system.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-03-05
1 state
NCT04034550
Cohort of Hospitalized Patients Suspected of Leptospirosis
COLEPT is a prospective interventional study that intends to better inform about leptospirosis, a neglected zoonotic infectious disease. During prospective follow-up of hospitalized acute leptospirosis cases, the participants will be assessed during 1 year for epidemiological, clinical, bacteriological and immunological data. Main intervention consists in blood sampling and biological bank constitution.
Gender: All
Ages: 1 Day - Any
Updated: 2024-07-30
1 state
NCT05436756
Chronic Post-leptospirosis Manifestations in Reunion
Leptospirosis is a zoonosis caused by spirochetes, pathogenic bacteria of the genus Leptospira. It is transmitted to humans through mucocutaneous lesions by contact with water or soil contaminated by the urine of animal reservoirs (rats, dogs, pigs, cattle, etc.). Exposure to fresh water, contact with water or soil contaminated with animal waste are the main risk factors. This disease is an important public health problem in humans and animals. The annual global incidence is estimated at nearly one million cases with a mortality of 5 to 10% for all cases combined and up to 50% in the event of multi-organ failure. The number of cases is growing and the disease is probably more widespread because it is underdiagnosed. The incidence could increase further in the coming decades due to climate change and rapid urbanization. In the Overseas Departments and Regions (DROM), it is an endemic condition and its incidence is 10 to 100 times higher than that of mainland France, mainly for climatic reasons. In Réunion, the disease is notifiable with a number of notified cases ranging from 70 to more than 100 cases per year in recent years. Nearly 90% of confirmed cases were hospitalized and more than a third of patients stayed in intensive care. Recently, a multicenter cohort of patients hospitalized with leptospirosis in La Réunion (COLEPT) was funded by Inserm to identify the severity factors of the disease in patients hospitalized in one of the 4 hospitals on the island. A community of hospital practitioners active on this theme has been identified and constitutes the core of this project. The main objective of the study, the inclusions of which began in January 2020, is to identify the severity factors of leptospirosis in Reunion. Patient follow-up is planned for up to 1 year with 2 medical visits at 1 month and 1 year and 2 telephone interviews on quality of life. The disease is generally perceived as a purely acute condition with a rapid ad integrum recovery. Nevertheless, the evolution at a distance has been little evaluated. A few publications report complications and elements of chronicity in the medium/long term (\>1 year) which would require monitoring these patients over a longer period. Regarding these potential chronic manifestations, they may be chronic fatigue, uveitis, renal failure, chronic renal carriage with urinary excretion of leptospires, myalgia and muscle weakness, headaches, malaise but also cardiac or neurological manifestations. A Dutch study conducted on subjects with confirmed diagnosis reported 30% of patients with chronic post-leptospirosis symptoms which persisted in 21% of subjects more than 24 months after infection, but very few data are available on the chronic forms. The objective will be to study the future of patients beyond 1 year of infection in clinical and serological terms, but also in terms of quality of life, use of alternative medicines and complementary and health literacy profiles.
Gender: All
Updated: 2023-08-31