There are about 10460 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Australia. The country of the clinical trial is determined by the location of where the clinical research is being studied. Most studies are often held in multiple locations & countries.
Currently, optical and pharmacological interventions have been developed to prevent the progression of childhood myopia. However, no myopia control strategy has been shown to have complete efficacy in controlling myopia progression in children. One possible reason is that risk factors contributing to the development of myopia were not controlled in previous clinical studies including time outdoors and near vision behaviour. This study aims to quantify time spent outdoors and near vision behavior in myopic children and its impact on myopia control efficacy. The outcomes of this study will guide clinicians on risk management and improve responses to existing treatments for progressive myopia.
The research study is being done to see if ziltivekimab can be used to treat people who were admitted to hospital because of a heart attack. Ziltivekimab might reduce development of heart disease, thereby preventing new heart attacks or strokes. Participants will either get ziltivekimab (active medicine) or placebo (a dummy medicine which has no effect on the body). Which treatment participants get is decided by chance. The chance of getting ziltivekimab or placebo is the same. Ziltivekimab is not yet approved in any country or region in the world. It is a new medicine that doctors cannot prescribe. The study will last for about 2 years.
This is a parallel, Phase 2, 2-arm, double-blind, randomized, multicenter, multinational, placebo-controlled study to evaluate efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), and biological effects of treatment of subcutaneous injection of amlitelimab compared with placebo in male and female participants aged 18 to 70 years with moderate to severe hidradenitis suppurativa (HS). The purpose of this study is to measure standardized clinician reported and participant-reported outcomes (ClinRO and PRO), safety, and drug concentration. An optional long-term extension (LTE) period will assess chronic safety and efficacy over an additional 80 weeks of amlitelimab treatment. Study details include: - The study duration will be up to 116 weeks, including a 4-week Screening period, a 16-week double-blind treatment period (DBT), an optional 80-week LTE period and a 16-week post-treatment follow-up period. - All participants who complete the 16-week DBT period will be offered entry into an optional LTE. - Participants who do not wish to enter the optional LTE period or who stop treatment prior to Week 16 (Visit 6) or stop investigational medicinal product (IMP) administration prior to completing the LTE period will proceed into the 16-week post-treatment follow-up period. - The number of planned in clinic visits will be up to six during the DBT period with an additional nine during the LTE period, plus one post-treatment follow-up end-of-study visit. Up to 11 optional in clinic visits are allowed for participants who do not wish to self-administer IMP between scheduled in clinic visits during the LTE period.
The primary objective of this study is to compare the efficacy of tarlatamab with placebo as assessed by progression free survival (PFS).
The purpose of this study is to evaluate efficacy and safety of KHK4951 eye drops in patients with DME.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate efficacy and safety of KHK4951 eye drops in patients with nAMD.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate safety and tolerability data when SRSD107 is administered as single and multiple SC injections to healthy participants. This information, along with PK/PD data, will help establish the appropriate doses and dosing regimen for future studies in patients.
This project aims to produce a solution for the rising incidence of dementia. This is particularly pertinent in Tasmania, Australia, with a rapidly ageing population and the oldest demographics of all Australian states. The team will develop TapTalk, a new screening test that detects risk of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology. TapTalk, will record a person's hand movements and speech patterns with a smartphone. Computer algorithms will learn which patterns of data are associated with AD pathology. This innovative test is based on: (i) emerging research that fine motor control required for hand and speech movements is sensitive to early AD pathology and (ii) the investigators' new machine learning methods.
The "SleepFix Study" is a clinical trial designed to evaluate the efficacy of mobile-delivered sleep restriction therapy (dBTi) in comparison to digital sleep health education (control) for treating insomnia disorder in adults aged 18 and above. The study is conducted entirely online, with 558 participants (279 in each group) and aims to determine the impact of the interventions on insomnia symptom severity, sleep metrics, subjective sleep quality, fatigue, anxiety, depressive symptoms, quality of life, medication usage, and workforce productivity.
To evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of SHR-1707 in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) due to Alzheimer's disease (AD) and mild AD for 26 weeks.