Publications by authors named "J A Bielicki"

Introduction: Children represent a large and vulnerable patient group. However, the evidence base for most paediatric diagnostic and therapeutic procedures remains limited or is often inferred from adults. There is an urgency to improve paediatric healthcare provision based on real-world evidence generation.

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Article Synopsis
  • * The MYTHIC Study is designed as a rigorous trial involving 13 Swiss pediatric centers, comparing macrolide treatment to placebo in children aged 3-17 diagnosed with pneumonia, using precise tests to confirm M. pneumoniae infection.
  • * The main goals are to assess the time to stabilize vital signs and determine any changes in patient care within 28 days, with an aim to show that the placebo is not significantly less effective than macrolide treatment in managing this infection.
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In clinical settings with no commonly accepted standard-of-care, multiple treatment regimens are potentially useful, but some treatments may not be appropriate for some patients. A personalized randomized controlled trial (PRACTical) design has been proposed for this setting. For a network of treatments, each patient is randomized only among treatments which are appropriate for them.

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Gram-negative bacteria (GNB) are a major cause of neonatal sepsis in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Although the World Health Organization (WHO) reports that over 80% of these sepsis deaths could be prevented through improved treatment, the efficacy of the currently recommended first- and second-line treatment regimens for this condition is increasingly affected by high rates of drug resistance. Here we assess three well known antibiotics, fosfomycin, flomoxef and amikacin, in combination as potential antibiotic treatment regimens by investigating the drug resistance and genetic profiles of commonly isolated GNB causing neonatal sepsis in LMICs.

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Article Synopsis
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae is a key cause of pneumonia in children, and a study (CAP-IT trial) examined antibiotic treatment effects on serotype prevalence and resistance, finding no significant differences based on dosage or duration of amoxicillin.
  • In-depth genomic analysis of 390 pneumococcal isolates revealed that serotypes 15B/C, 11A, 15A, and 23B1 were the most common, with varying levels of resistance to penicillin and amoxicillin, but overall low resistance rates.
  • The findings suggest that current amoxicillin treatment does not influence serotype prevalence, indicating a need for vaccines covering a broader range of pneumococcal serotypes.
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