interventional clinical trials that were approved in the European Union (EU)/European Economic Area (EEA) under the Clinical Trials Directive 2001/20/EC
clinical trials conducted outside the EU/EEA that are linked to European paediatric-medicine development
EU/EEA interventional clinical trials approved under or transitioned to the Clinical Trial Regulation 536/2014 are publicly accessible through the
Clinical Trials Information System (CTIS).
The EU Clinical Trials Register currently displays
44336
clinical trials with a EudraCT protocol, of which
7366
are clinical trials conducted with subjects less than 18 years old.
The register also displays information on
18700
older paediatric trials (in scope of Article 45 of the Paediatric Regulation (EC) No 1901/2006).
Phase 1 trials conducted solely on adults and that are not part of an agreed paediatric investigation plan (PIP) are not publicly available (see
Frequently Asked Questions ).
9 result(s) found for: Bullous impetigo.
Displaying page 1 of 1.
EudraCT Number: 2004-004439-70
Sponsor Protocol Number: TOC100224
Start Date*: 2005-05-20
Sponsor Name:GlaxSmithKline Research & Development
Full Title: A Randomised, Observer-blind, Multicentre, Non-inferiority, Comparative Study of the Safety and Efficacy of Topical 1% SB-275833 Ointment, Applied Twice Daily for 5 Days, versus Topical 2% Sodium F...
Medical condition: Impetigo
Disease:
Version
SOC Term
Classification Code
Term
Level
7.1
10021531
PT
Population Age: Infants and toddlers, Children, Adolescents, Under 18, Adults, Elderly
Full Title: A phase I open-label multiple dose study to examine the systemic bioavailability and safety of twice daily topical applications of ozenoxacin 1% cream formulation in patients with impetigo
Medical condition: Impetigo
Disease:
Version
SOC Term
Classification Code
Term
Level
14.1
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10021531
Impetigo
PT
Population Age: Infants and toddlers, Children, Adolescents, Under 18, Adults
Full Title: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Double Dummy, Comparative, Multicenter Study to Assess the Safety and Efficacy of Topical Retapamulin Ointment, 1%, versus Oral Linezolid in the Treatment of Secondarily...
Medical condition: secondarily-infected traumatic lesions (SITL; excluding abscesses) or impetigo due
to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA
Disease:
Version
SOC Term
Classification Code
Term
Level
19.1
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10021531
Impetigo
PT
Population Age: Infants and toddlers, Children, Adolescents, Under 18, Adults, Elderly
Full Title: A phase III 3 arms, multicenter, randomised, investigator-blind study to assess the efficacy and safety of ozenoxacin 1% cream applied twice daily for 5 days versus placebo in the treatment of pati...
Medical condition: Impetigo
Disease:
Version
SOC Term
Classification Code
Term
Level
14.1
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10021531
Impetigo
PT
Population Age: Children, Adolescents, Under 18, Adults, Elderly
Full Title: An antimicrobial cream for the treatment of impetigo
Medical condition: The condition to be studied is uncomplicated localised primary non-bullous impetigo, suitable for topical antibacterial therapy alone.
Disease:
Version
SOC Term
Classification Code
Term
Level
20.0
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10021531
Impetigo
PT
Population Age: Infants and toddlers, Children, Adolescents, Under 18, Adults, Elderly
Sponsor Name:GlaxoSmithKline Research & Development Ltd
Full Title: An Open-Label, Non-Comparative Study to Assess the Pharmacokinetics, Safety and Efficacy of Topical Retapamulin (SB-275833) Ointment, 1%, Twice Daily for Five Days in the Treatment of Uncomplicated...
Medical condition: Uncomplicated skin and skin structure infections
Full Title: EFFECTIVENESS OF TREATMENT WITH ANTISEPTICS VERSUS TOPICAL ANTIBIOTICS IN MILD IMPETIGO IN PEDIATRIC PATIENTS
Medical condition: Impetigo is a bacterial infection of very common skin in the pediatric population. In the usual clinical practice, the treatment of this infection has been based on topical antibiotics. The widespr...
Full Title: A phase III 2 arms, multicenter, randomised, double-blind study to assess the efficacy and safety of ozenoxacin 1% cream applied twice daily for 5 days versus placebo in the treatment of patients w...
Medical condition: Impetigo
Disease:
Population Age: Infants and toddlers, Children, Adolescents, Under 18, Adults, Elderly
Full Title: A Phase 3, Multicenter, Open-Label, Randomized, Comparator Controlled Trial of the Safety and Efficacy of Dalbavancin versus Active Comparator in Pediatric Subjects with Acute Bacterial Skin and Sk...
Medical condition: Acute bacterial skin and skin structure infection. For Cohort 5 (from birth to less than 3 months) also patients with sepsis are allowed.
Disease:
Version
SOC Term
Classification Code
Term
Level
20.0
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10066412
Staphylococcus aureus skin infection
LLT
20.0
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10037633
Pyoderma (skin infection)
LLT
20.1
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10040873
Skin infection aggravated
LLT
20.0
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10040872
Skin infection
PT
20.0
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10040875
Skin infection pyogenic
LLT
20.0
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10040874
Skin infection NOS
LLT
20.1
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10066409
Staphylococcal skin infection
PT
20.0
10021881 - Infections and infestations
10040047
Sepsis
PT
Population Age: Preterm newborn infants, Newborns, Infants and toddlers, Children, Adolescents, Under 18
Subscribe to this Search
To subscribe to the RSS feed for this search click
here
.
This will provide an RSS feed for clinical trials matching your search that have been added or updated in the last 7 days.
Download Options:
Number of Trials to download:
Download Content:
Download Format:
Note, where multi-state trials are shown in search results, selecting "Full Trial details" will download full information for each of the member states/countries involved in the trial.
• EEA CTAs: Date study was authorised to proceed • Outside EU/EEA: Date study was submitted in EudraCT