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Abortion, Habitual clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03766594 Completed - Clinical trials for Miscarriage, Recurrent

Sildenafil Citrate in Early Unexplained Recurrent Pregnancy Loss

Start date: January 1, 2018
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Recurrent unexplained spontaneous miscarriage (RSM) is defined as three consecutive pregnancy loss prior to 20 weeks from the last menstrual period. 1% to 2% of women experience RSM. Treatment of URSM is a challenging issue. The currently available lines of treatment according to simplicity of use, reliability and degree of invasiveness include corticosteroids, sildenafil citrate, aspirin, heparin and immunoglobulins (besides good antenatal care), but up to now there are no prospective randomized studies, powerful enough, to determine a significant difference between these therapeutic protocols, with any of the above mentioned pharmacological agents. Sildenafil Citrate (Viagra®), a vasodilator, is also described as an anti-inflammatory agent. While improving uterine blood flow in the proliferative phase, NO may have detrimental effects at the level of the endometrium during the implantation window. The NO- mediated release of cytokines such as tumour necrosis factor- from activated natural killer cells has been implicated as a cause of implantation failure. Based on these observations, this study attempts was made to study uterine arteries and sub-endometrial blood flow during the luteal phase in normal fertile women and in patients with Unexplained recurrent miscarriage

NCT ID: NCT03710226 Completed - Clinical trials for Recurrent Miscarriage

Use of Platelet Indices for Prediction of Recurrent Miscarriage

Start date: January 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Platelet indices might be a marker for platelet activation, and thus could predict thrombosis. This might be the cause in some cases of recurrent miscarriage. This study aims to evaluate the use of platelet indices -as a simple test- to predict recurrent miscarriage.

NCT ID: NCT03703401 Completed - Clinical trials for Abortion, Spontaneous

The Role of Hydrosalpinx in Recurrent Miscarriage

Start date: February 28, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Miscarriage affects one in five pregnancies and little progress has been made in understanding and treating this distressing condition. C. trachomatis is the most common sexually transmitted infection in the UK. C. trachomatis infection can have serious health consequences, including fallopian tube damage. Untreated C. trachomatis infection and tubal damage have been associated with miscarriage and adverse pregnancy outcomes such as preterm birth, low birth weight and stillbirth. A cohort study is needed to establish the prevalence of tubal disease in women with recurrent miscarriages. HyCoSy will be performed to identify tubal disease and establish the magnitude of the problem in the recurrent miscarriage population. The prognosis of tubal disease on miscarriage and other obstetric outcomes, and the role of medical interventions such as tubal surgery (to treat hydrosalpinx) on reducing miscarriage and adverse obstetric outcomes will also be studied. Objectives 1. Establish the prevalence of hydrosalpinx in the recurrent miscarriage population. 2. Establish the prognosis of women diagnosed with recurrent miscarriage with concurrent hydrosalpinx. 3. Explore the role of tubal surgery for improving reproductive outcomes in women with recurrent miscarriage population and hydrosalpinx.

NCT ID: NCT03475160 Completed - Recurrent Abortion Clinical Trials

Sildenafil Citrate and Recurrent Abortion

Start date: December 1, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Two groups of unexplained recurrent spontaneous abortion, each included 65 participants. scheduled randomly into; the study group received Sildenafil Citrate and Placebo group. The intervention started from day 21-23 of the cycle preceding spontaneous pregnancy and continued till the 12th-week of gestation. The primary outcome measure was the difference in the live birth between both groups. Secondary outcome measures were the differences between both groups regard pulsatility index (PI) and resistance index (RI), a number of take-home babies, the reported side-effects of treatment and the pregnancy-related complications.

NCT ID: NCT03401918 Completed - Clinical trials for Recurrent Pregnancy Loss

Assessing the Endometrial Environment in Recurrent Pregnancy Loss and Unexplained Infertility

Start date: August 1, 2017
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine if patients with recurrent pregnancy loss or unexplained infertility have an altered uterine gene expression or uterine microbiome (micro-organism composition) during the window of embryo implantation. Furthermore we would like to assess for women with an abnormal uterine gene expression whether vaginal progesterone medication improves or alters gene expression and for women with an abnormal microbiome whether antibiotic treatment followed by probiotic treatment normalizes the microbiome.

NCT ID: NCT03336463 Completed - Clinical trials for Miscarriage, Recurrent

Prediction of Recurrent Pregnancy Loss by a New Thrombophilia Based Genetic Risk Score

TiC-RPL
Start date: February 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) is a clinical problem affecting 1-5% of couples of reproductive age. The contribution of thrombophilia to RPL is disputed. This controversy is partly due to low sensitivity of the genetic variants currently used to evaluate hereditary thrombophilia: the Leiden mutation (identified as rs6025) in the coagulation factor 5 (F5L) gene and mutation G20210A (identified as rs1799963) in the prothrombin (PT) gene. Our objective was to determine whether a wider algorithm that includes clinic and genetic variants associated with thrombophilia could be more useful in the prediction for RPL than FVL and PT alone.

NCT ID: NCT03178682 Completed - Clinical trials for Recurrent Pregnancy Loss

Ultrasound Predictors of Early Pregnancy Failure in Patients With Recurrent Pregnancy Loss

Start date: January 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

evaluation of the role of ultrasonographic parameters (mean gestational sac diameter, yolk sac diameter, crown rump length, embryonic heart rate and uterine artery Doppler) in predicting early pregnancy failure in patients with recurrent pregnancy loss

NCT ID: NCT03174951 Completed - Clinical trials for Recurrent Pregnancy Loss

Immunomodulatory Effects of IVIg on Pregnancy Rate of Patient With Recurrent Pregnancy Loss

Start date: September 20, 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Miscarriage occurs in about 1-2% of human pregnancies and is one of the common pregnancy problems before 12 weeks of pregnancy. Anatomical and chromosomal abnormalities, microbial factors and auto and alloimmune reactions have been speculated to attribute in recurrent miscarriage. Unexplained recurrent miscarriage (URM) is defined as three or more repeated abortions, probably caused by maternal immunological rejection . Given that maternal immune system encounters semi-allogeneic fetus, pregnancy outcome is associated with the interaction between maternal immune system and immuno-regulatory capability of the fetus. Effectiveness of treatment approaches in RM patients has been controversial and remained to be discovered. Immunomodulatory agents such as corticosteroids and allogeneic lymphocyte immunization showed variable success rates in RM patients. Therapeutic effects of IVIG in unexplained RM is controversial and most positive results were obtained from the trials in RM women with cellular immune abnormalities, such as increased NK cell level and/or cytotoxicity, and T cell abnormalities. Previous studies have shown that the incidence of genetic abnormalities in children who have received immunosuppressive drugs such as IVIg like normal people and normal society. In this study we used IVIg at the time of positive pregnancy,400 mg/kg IVIG was administered intravenously. Following the first administration, IVIG well given every 4 weeks through 32 weeks of gestation to suppress the immune system in patients with immunological causes of RPL and the results will be compared with a control group that did not receive any type of drug.

NCT ID: NCT03156491 Completed - Clinical trials for Recurrent Miscarriages

Maternal Embryo Interaction in Recurrent Miscarriages

MEER
Start date: June 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Background of the study: The etiology of recurrent miscarriage (RM, defined as three or more consecutive miscarriages without any proven maternal or fetal cause), remains undiagnosed in more than 50% of cases. In these cases it is generally considered that a disturbance in the normal mother-embryo interactions is a causal factor. This disturbance may be based on a dysregulation of embryo invasiveness and/or decidual acceptance (e.g. altered decidualization; endometrial changes in preparation for the acceptance of a putative pregnancy). Moreover, dysfunctional maternal immune regulatory natural killer (NK) cells, implicated in tolerance induction and trophoblast invasion,may also underlie the occurrence of RM. The Selection Failure hypothesis for RM suggests that super-receptive endometrium (possibly due to increased embryo invasiveness and/or decidual acceptance and/or dysregulated immune cell function) may allow 'poor quality' embryos to implant and present as a clinical pregnancy before miscarrying. Fundamental knowledge on mechanisms of embryo implantation, decidual function and maternal immune reactivity in successful pregnancies has accumulated over the past 5 years. This study aims to investigate whether dysregulation of (one of) these mechanisms may underlie RM. Objective of the study: To test The Selection Failure hypothesis by assessing A) the degree of embryo invasiveness and decidual acceptance (the quality of decidualization, endometrium-embryo communication and endometrial stromal cell (ESC) migration) and B) the angiogenic capacity of decidual NK (dNK) cells, in order to elucidate the pattern of the mother-embryo equilibrium in women with RM.

NCT ID: NCT03081325 Completed - Clinical trials for Unexplained Recurrent Miscarriage and Recurrent Implantation Failure

A Preliminary Study About Unexplained Recurrent Miscarriage and Repeated Implantation Failure Patients Treated With Low-dose Lymphocyte Immunotherapy

immunotherapy
Start date: March 2015
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Recurrent miscarriage(RM) and recurrent implantation failure (RIF) are clinical challenge for clinicians and patients who are desperate for a healthy child.The specific etiology contains chromosomal abnormalities, reproductive anatomical abnormalities, endocrine disorders, reproductive system infections, autoimmune and environmental factors. However there are still 50% to 60% RM and RIF which don't have a clear cause,mainly associated with alloimmune factors.Among various treatments,lymphocytes active immunotherapy is the most common treatment method, and its clinical efficacy is widely recognized although its action mechanism is not clear so far.