Amoxicillin Sodium

Clinical trials investigating Amoxicillin Sodium are studying how it performs in different patient groups and infections. These trials mainly look at safety, effectiveness, and treatment length in people with bone, joint, urinary, lung, skin, blood, or critical care infections. Some studies also compare Amoxicillin Sodium with other antibiotics or shorter treatment plans.

Table of Contents

Trial overview

The trial data show that Amoxicillin Sodium is being studied in several different clinical situations, mostly for infections.[1] The studies are interventional, which means researchers assign treatments and compare results between groups.[1] Most of the studies are in Phase 3, while a smaller number are in Phase 2 or low-intervention designs.[1]

These trials do not focus on one single disease.[1] Instead, they test Amoxicillin Sodium in bone and joint infections, urinary tract infection, skin infection, bloodstream infection, pneumonia, and severe infections in hospital or intensive care settings.[1]

Patient groups and conditions

One important study includes patients with infection of osteosynthesis material, which means metal or other material used to hold a broken bone in place.[1] These patients are treated after surgical cleaning of the infected area, with either the implant kept in place or removed.[1]

Other trials include people with periprosthetic joint infection, which is an infection around an artificial joint such as a knee or hip replacement.[1] Another study includes adults with lower-limb erysipelas, a skin infection, and another includes patients with febrile urinary tract infection, which means a urine infection with fever.[1]

Some studies involve more serious hospital cases, such as uncomplicated enterococcal bacteremia, catheter-related bloodstream infection due to Staphylococcus aureus, severe COPD exacerbation, and serious infections in critically ill patients.[1] There is also a study in children with systemic infections and another in pregnant women with premature rupture of membranes at term.[1]

Trial designs and phases

Most Amoxicillin Sodium trials in the data are Phase 3 studies, which usually compare treatments in larger groups of patients.[1] Examples include trials in osteosynthesis material infection, enterococcal bacteremia, erysipelas, community-acquired pneumonia, and catheter-related bloodstream infection.[1]

There are also smaller or earlier studies.[1] The urinary tract infection study is Phase 2, and the medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw study is also Phase 2.[1] Some studies are marked as low intervention, meaning the treatment strategy is being studied with less intense intervention than a standard drug trial.[1]

The trials are usually randomized, open-label, or multicenter.[1] Randomized means patients are assigned by chance to different treatment groups, and multicenter means the study is run in more than one hospital or clinic.[1]

Main outcomes being measured

The studies measure different kinds of success depending on the infection being treated.[1] In the osteosynthesis material trial, the main outcome is clinical failure, including return of symptoms, new signs of infection, need for extra antibiotics, and related surgical or culture findings.[1]

In the urinary tract infection trial, the main outcome is clinical response, which includes no new healthcare visits or antibiotics, fever staying down, and symptoms improving at the test-of-cure visit.[1] In the erysipelas trial, the main outcome is complete remission, meaning fever and local skin signs disappear and no extra antibiotics are needed.[1]

Other studies use outcomes such as clinical success at test of cure, remission at a set week, vital status at day 28, cure without relapse at day 30, or the number of days alive without antibiotics.[1] One trial in periprosthetic joint infection also focuses on cost-utility, which compares treatment costs with quality-adjusted life years, a measure that combines length and quality of life.[1]

Special populations and care settings

Some Amoxicillin Sodium trials are built around special patient groups.[1] These include critically ill children, elderly hospitalized patients with viral infection, adult haematology patients with chemotherapy-induced fever, and patients receiving CAR-T cell therapy for blood cancers.[1]

Several studies also take place in intensive care units or other hospital settings where infection risk is high.[1] In these settings, the studies may look at antibiotic exposure levels, days without antibiotics, or whether a shorter treatment plan is enough.[1]

One trial in children studies early model-informed precision dosing, which means using early drug level information to help guide dosing so that treatment reaches the intended target.[1] Another trial in critically ill patients measures whether antibiotic plasma targets are reached, which is a laboratory way to see if the drug level in blood matches the planned target.[1]

What the trials compare

Many of the studies compare Amoxicillin Sodium with other antibiotics or with different treatment durations.[1] For example, some trials compare a shorter course with a longer course, while others compare Amoxicillin Sodium-based treatment with another standard antibiotic plan.[1]

In some trials, Amoxicillin Sodium is one option among several antibiotics listed in the protocol.[1] In other trials, it appears as part of a broader treatment strategy being tested for infection control, recovery, or prevention of worsening disease.[1]

Across the trial data, the main research goal is not to describe the drug itself, but to learn when Amoxicillin Sodium-based treatment works best, which patients may benefit, and whether shorter or alternative antibiotic strategies can give similar results.[1]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
NCT05294796Phase 3Infection of osteosynthesis material after long bone fractureAuthorised364
2024-520226-10-00Phase 3Hip or knee prosthesis infectionsAuthorised20
2025-520995-24-00Phase 3Chemotherapy-induced fever in adult haematology patientsAuthorised1526
2025-522088-13-00Phase 3Periprosthetic joint infectionAuthorised50
2023-503447-33-00Phase 2Febrile urinary tract infectionAuthorised560
NCT05394298Phase 3Uncomplicated enterococcal bacteremiaAuthorised284
2022-501142-30-00Phase 3Premature rupture of membranes at term in nulliparous pregnant womenCompleted520
NCT07104552Phase 3Lower-limb erysipelasAuthorised656
NCT04166110Phase 3Community-acquired pneumoniaAuthorised500
2024-516447-12-00Phase 3Systemic infections in critically ill childrenAuthorised58
NCT05795647Phase 2Medication-related osteonecrosis of the jawAuthorised17
NCT05117398Phase 3Catheter-related bloodstream infections due to Staphylococcus aureusAuthorised406
2024-516232-10-00Phase 3Serious infections in critically ill patientsAuthorised1250
2024-511896-13-00Low InterventionSevere COPD exacerbationAuthorised204
2025-521571-30-00Phase 3Infection prevention after CAR-T therapyAuthorised228

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Amoxicillin Sodium

  • Study comparing dalbavancin to standard antibiotic treatment for patients with periprosthetic joint infection

    Recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Denmark
  • Study of pivmecillinam compared to standard antibiotics for treating Escherichia coli urinary tract infection with fever

    Recruiting

    2 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Norway Sweden
  • Study on the Effectiveness of Autovaccines Compared to Antibiotics for Patients with Hip or Knee Prosthesis Infections

    Recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Spain
  • Study on Early Stopping of Antibiotics in Elderly Patients with Viral Infections Using Amoxicillin, Clavulanic Acid, Piperacillin, Tazobactam, and Pristinamycin

    Recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    France
  • Study of GNT0003 and imlifidase in adults with Crigler-Najjar syndrome who require daily phototherapy and have pre-existing AAV8 antibodies

    Recruiting

    2 1 1 1
    France
  • Study Comparing Dalbavancin to Standard Antibiotics for Patients with Staphylococcus aureus Bloodstream Infections

    Recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    France
  • Study on Reducing Antibiotic Use in Severe COPD Exacerbation with Amoxicillin, Cefotaxime, and Ciprofloxacin for Patients on Mechanical Ventilation or Oxygen Therapy

    Recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    France
  • Study of Amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, Piperacillin-tazobactam and Meropenem dosing in critically ill children with systemic infections

    Recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Belgium
  • Study on the Effects of Baricitinib and Drug Combination for Adults with Severe Community-Acquired Pneumonia, Severe Influenza, or Severe and Moderate COVID-19

    Recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Belgium Croatia Czechia Estonia France Germany +7
  • Study on the Effectiveness of Moxifloxacin and Drug Combination for Treating Bone Implant Infections in Patients with Long Bone Fractures

    Recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Spain

Glossary

  • Interventional study: A type of clinical trial where researchers give a treatment and compare results between groups.
  • Phase 2: An earlier trial phase that often looks at whether a treatment seems to work and how safe it is in a smaller group.
  • Phase 3: A later trial phase that compares treatments in larger groups to see how well they work and how safe they are.
  • Enrollment: The number of people planned or included in a study.
  • Primary outcome: The main result the researchers want to measure.
  • Clinical success: A study result showing that the patient improved in the way the trial defined.
  • Non-inferiority: A study design that checks whether one treatment is not worse than another by more than a small, planned amount.
  • Debridement: Surgery to clean infected tissue or material from a wound or bone area.
  • Implant retention: Keeping the implanted material in place during treatment.
  • Phototherapy: Treatment with light, mentioned in Crigler-Najjar syndrome studies.
  • Remission: A state where signs of disease are much better or have disappeared.
  • Quality-adjusted life years (QALYs): A way to measure both length of life and quality of life in health economic studies.

References