Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
The trial will examine the efficacy of sambucol in the treatment of influenza. The primary efficacy endpoint will be the length of time to resolution of influenza illness.The double blind trial will be conducted at the Personnel Clinic, and at the Clinical virology Unit, Hadassah University Hospital, and will include 100 patients with laboratory-confirmed influenza infection, 50 in the sambucol and 50 in the placebo study arm.
Full description
The trial will be conducted at the Personnel Clinic, and at the Clinical virology Unit, Hadassah University Hospital.
Candidates for participation in the trial :
Patients who will present at the clinic with influenza-like symptoms; men and women ages 20 yrs- 65 yrs who will sign written informed consent
Excluded from the trial will be:
The study participants will receive treatment (either Sambucol or placebo) for five days. The follow-up period will be 10 days. All patients initially included in the trial will be followed for 10 days.
Inclusion criteria:
Study Patients A total of 100 patients with laboratory-confirmed influenza infection will be included in the study (50 in each study arm).
This calculation is based on the expected percentage of recovery within 3 days from initial treatment (allowing that 80% of patients given the active component will show improvement as opposed to 50% of placebo patients).
Assuming that 50% of the patients presenting with influenza-like illness will have a laboratory-confirmed influenza infection, a total number of 200 patients is expected.
The primary efficacy endpoint will be the length of time to resolution of influenza illness (defined as the period from start of study drug to the relief of symptoms).
Study design:
Laboratory diagnosis of influenza infection:
Combined nose and throat specimens will be tested for the presence of influenza virus at the Clinical Virology Unit by real-time PCR, following viral RNA extraction, using the TaqMan ABI 7900 instrument. Primers and fluorescent probes specific for influenza A and B viruses will be employed in a multiplex reaction.
Specimens found positive for influenza by real-time PCR will be further subjected to influenza culture on MDCK cells.
The recovered influenza viruses will be subtyped by hemagglutination inhibition, using specific antisera obtained from the WHO, or by multiplex reverse transcription (RT)- PCR reaction, using specific primers for influenza B as well as for the different influenza A H and N.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Pregnant women or women who cannot exclude pregnancy.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal