There are about 28871 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Canada. 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.
Aim: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the use feasibility of FreeO2 so as to deliver automatically oxygen in the emergency department in a patient population admitted for acute respiratory failure. Hypothesis: The principal hypothesis is that FreeO2 is possible and well-accepted by nurses and medical personnel and there are advantages to use this system. In comparison with the common oxygen delivery (the rotameter), the hypothesis is that FreeO2 system will make for a better control of the oxygen saturation in function of designed target, reducing the desaturation time and hyperoxia. We think that oxygen weaning will be faster than classical way if it is automated. In addition, FreeO2 could reduce the number of intervention by nurse personnel.
Obesity is a major risk factor for disease and a public health problem. Recent information suggests that while it is possible for most overweight adults to lose a substantial amount of weight, maintaining the weight loss for any extended time (2 to 3 years) is very difficult. This is because trying to maintain big changes in exercise and/or eating behaviour is very difficult in today's environment that makes sustain big changes in behaviour (Example: eat allot less or exercise allot more) very hard. In fact at this time health professionals are unsure of how best to help overweight adults maintain big behavioral changes for long periods of time. In response, we propose that making smaller changes in eating and exercise habits every day may be possible in today's environment and if so, small weight changes may be possible to maintain for long periods of time. This study is designed to assess whether making small changes in eating and exercise behavior will be associated with sustained weight loss over three (3) years. The results of the study may have important implications for development of public health messages and clinical guidelines for prevention and treatment of obesity through small changes in both exercise and eating habits.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of orally administered telotristat etiprate.
The purpose of this study is to assess the effect of canagliflozin (JNJ-28431754) compared to placebo in the treatment of participants with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM), who have inadequate glycemic control on maximally or near-maximally effective doses of metformin and sitagliptin.
A study to evaluate levosimendan compared with placebo in reducing the composite event rate of all-cause death, perioperative MI, need for new dialysis, or use of mechanical assist (IABP, LVAD or ECMO) in subjects with reduced ejection fraction undergoing cardiac surgery on cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB).
This multi-center, randomized, double-blind, 3-arm, parallel-group, placebo-controlled study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of RG1662 in adults and adolescents with Down syndrome. Subjects will be randomized to receive RG1662 either at low or high dose or placebo orally twice daily for 26 weeks.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of brodalumab, compared to placebo, in subjects with psoriatic arthritis. The key secondary objective is to evaluate the efficacy of brodalumab compared to placebo at week 16. The safety objective of this study is to evaluate the safety profile of brodalumab in subjects with psoriatic arthritis.
This is an open label, multi-center, Phase 1/2 dose escalation study of BBI608 administered in combination with either FOLFOX6 with and without bevacizumab, or CAPOX, or FOLFIRI with and without bevacizumab, or regorafenib, or irinotecan.
This study is to investigate the pharmacokinetics (PK) together with the safety and tolerability of JDP-205 at 5 mg and 10 mg intravenous doses and 10 mg intramuscular dose, in comparison to the marketed cetirizine oral product Zyrtec® 10 mg tablets (an OTC product) in healthy male and female volunteers after a single dose administration.
Cardiac valve disorders are widely spread in the general population and represents the third most frequent cardiovascular illness after coronary disease and arterial hypertension. In this context, aortic valve stenosis (the central pathology in this project) is the most common form of valve disease. Cardiac valve replacement is in the vast majority of cases the first line therapy for degenerative heart-valve diseases. These are represented by mechanical and bioprosthetic valve (BHV). In the vast majority of cases, BHV are derived from animals and from a biological standpoint are classified as xenografts. BHV are severely penalised by a premature structural damage, with ultimate valve failure occurring around 10 years after surgery in 5 to 30% of cases, depending on the type of BHV used. Several factors [including dyslipidaemia, gender, valve position] may contribute to the ultimate failure of the BHV and there has been increasing evidence recently of a substantial immune reaction elicited by the implanted BHV. This immune response is still poorly understood. It may lead to adverse immune reactions and this will be thoroughly investigated by the TRANSLINK team. In this light, the TRANSLINK project aims to provide the necessary data to demonstrate beyond any reasonable doubt the central role of the anti-BHV immune response in the premature failure of BHV and to provide efficient strategies to enable safe implantation of BHV valves in currently unsuitable candidates