Clinical Trials Logo

ALS clinical trials

View clinical trials related to ALS.

Filter by:
  • Not yet recruiting  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT06377033 Not yet recruiting - Parkinson Disease Clinical Trials

Using the EHR to Advance Genomic Medicine Across a Diverse Health System

Start date: May 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Given the expansion of indications for genetic testing and our understanding of conditions for which the results change medical management, it is imperative to consider novel ways to deliver care beyond the traditional genetic counseling visit, which are both amenable to large-scale implementation and sustainable. The investigators propose an entirely new approach for the implementation of genomic medicine, supported by the leadership of Penn Medicine, investigating the use of non-geneticist clinician and patient nudges in the delivery of genomic medicine through a pragmatic randomized clinical trial, addressing NHGRI priorities. Our application is highly conceptually and technically innovative, building upon expertise and infrastructure already in place. Innovative qualities of our proposal include: 1) Cutting edge EHR infrastructure already built to support genomic medicine (e.g., partnering with multiple commercial genetic testing laboratories for direct test ordering and results reporting in the EHR); 2) Automated EHR-based direct ordering or referring by specialist clinicians (i.e., use of replicable modules that enable specialist clinicians to order genetic testing through Epic Smartsets, including all needed components, such as populated gene lists, smartphrases, genetic testing, informational websites and acknowledgement e-forms for patient signature); 3) EHR algorithms for accurate patient identification (i.e., electronic phenotype algorithms to identify eligible patients, none of which currently have phenotype algorithms present in PheKB; 4) Behavioral economics-informed implementation science methods: This trial will be the first to evaluate implementation strategies informed by behavioral economics, directed at clinicians and/or patients, for increasing the use of genetic testing; further it will be the first study in this area to test two forms of defaults as a potential local adaptation to facilitate implementation (ordering vs. referring); and 5) Dissemination: In addition to standard dissemination modalities,PheKB95, GitHub and Epic Community Library, the investigators propose to disseminate via AnVIL (NHGRI's Genomic Data Science Analysis, Visualization, and Informatics Lab-Space). Our results will represent an entirely new paradigm for the provision of genomic medicine for patients in whom the results of genetic testing change medical management.

NCT ID: NCT05621213 Not yet recruiting - ALS Clinical Trials

Satisfaction of Patients With Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Regarding Home Assisted Teleconsultation

VNI_SLA
Start date: November 30, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Satisfaction of patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis under non-invasive ventilation regarding home assisted teleconsultation

NCT ID: NCT05602142 Not yet recruiting - ALS Clinical Trials

Study of [11C]CPPC as a Clinical PET Radioligand Biomarker of Microglial Activation in ALS

Start date: May 2024
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

1. Establish the safety and tolerability of the 5-cyano-N-(4-(4-[11C]Methylpiperazin-1-yl)-2-(Piperidin-1-yl)Phenyl)Furan-2-carboxamide ([11C]CPPC) PET radioligand in ALS patients and controls 2. Examine whether [11C]CPPC PET uptake is elevated in brains of ALS patients and whether there is a correlation with clinical phenotype. 3. Correlate [11C]CPPC PET imaging with other ALS outcome measures and biofluid biomarkers 4. Examine longitudinal changes in [11C]CPPC PET imaging during disease course.

NCT ID: NCT05423678 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Clinical Trial - Analyzing Participation Experiences Of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Patients

Start date: July 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Clinical trial participation has always been substantially skewed toward certain demographic groups. However, there has been little study on whether trial qualities impact participation in either a positive or negative way. The goal of this research is to identify the characteristics that consistently restrict patients' ability to participate in or complete a trial in which they were initially interested. This data will be analyzed via a number of demographic lenses in order to find trends that could benefit future ALS sufferers.