Oral Hygiene and Prophylactic Antibiotics to Prevent Intracerebral Hemorrhage Associated Pneumonia (NCT07311343) | Clinical Trial Compass
RecruitingPhase 4
Oral Hygiene and Prophylactic Antibiotics to Prevent Intracerebral Hemorrhage Associated Pneumonia
China440 participantsStarted 2026-01-07
Plain-language summary
Project Name:
Randomized Controlled Clinical Study on oral hygiene and prophylactic antibiotics to prevent Intracerebral Hemorrhage associated pneumonia
Research Objectives:
To evaluate the effectiveness, safety and health economics value of enhanced oral hygiene combined with antibiotics in preventing post-cerebral hemorrhage pneumonia.
1. To clarify the effectiveness of enhanced oral hygiene combined with antibiotics in preventing post-cerebral hemorrhage pneumonia.
2. To clarify the safety of enhanced oral hygiene combined with antibiotics in preventing post-cerebral hemorrhage pneumonia.
3. To clarify the health economics value of low-intensity enhanced oral hygiene combined with antibiotics in preventing post-cerebral hemorrhage pneumonia.
Research Design:
Research Type: Multicenter, Randomized, Controlled, Open Label, Blinded Endpoint Research Design Research Hypothesis: Intensive oral hygiene combined with antibiotic treatment is beneficial in reducing the incidence of pulmonary infections related to cerebral hemorrhage.
Who can participate
Age range18 Years ā 80 Years
SexALL
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AI-rewrites the medical criteria so a patient or caregiver can understand them. Always confirm with the trial site.
ā. Informed consent from the patient and/or their family.
Exclusion criteria
ā. Secondary intracerebral hemorrhage, such as that resulting from cerebral aneurysms, cerebral arteriovenous malformations, brain tumors, cerebral venous system thrombosis, antithrombotic therapy (antiplatelet, anticoagulant therapy, etc.), hemorrhagic transformation after cerebral infarction, hematological diseases, etc.
What they're measuring
1
The occurrence of pneumonia related to cerebral hemorrhage
Timeframe: From enrollment to the 10th day after randomization or at the time of discharge
. The patient's clinical symptoms and signs suggest signs of brain herniation, such as progressive decline in consciousness level, weakened or absent pupillary light reflex.
ā. Obvious signs of pneumonia already exist, such as fever, persistent cough or yellow purulent sputum, and imaging examinations (chest X-ray or chest CT) suggest signs of pneumonia; two consecutive measurements of body temperature ā„ 37.5ā, or one measurement of body temperature ā„ 38.0ā.
ā. A history of severe cardiovascular disease, meeting any of the following: 1) Heart failure (New York Heart Association functional class ā„ III); 2) Unstable angina within 3 months; 3) Any supraventricular or ventricular arrhythmia requiring treatment; 4) Prolonged QTc interval considered clinically significant by the investigator (reference range: \> 450ms for men, \> 470ms for women) (Note: QTc interval must be calculated according to Fridericia's formula); 5) Complete atrioventricular block and left or right bundle branch block requiring treatment; 6) Acute myocardial infarction or interventional treatment within 1 month; high-risk patients with chronic arrhythmia, such as sick sinus syndrome, second or third-degree atrioventricular block, bradycardia-related syncope without pacemaker installation, etc.
ā. Diagnosed with severe active liver disease, such as acute hepatitis, chronic active hepatitis, liver cirrhosis, etc.; or ALT or AST \> 3 times the upper limit of normal.
ā. Severe renal insufficiency: such as patients undergoing dialysis, or diagnosed with severe active kidney disease, etc., or creatinine clearance rate \< 50 mL/min.
ā. Other severe diseases that lead to an expected lifespan of less than 1 year.
ā. Patients scheduled for surgical intervention before the first administration, including but not limited to hematoma evacuation (including minimally invasive and conventional surgery), decompressive craniectomy, hematoma aspiration, and external ventricular drainage.