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NCT ID: NCT05686551 Recruiting - Huntington Disease Clinical Trials

GENERATION HD2. A Study to Evaluate the Safety, Biomarkers, and Efficacy of Tominersen Compared With Placebo in Participants With Prodromal and Early Manifest Huntington's Disease.

Start date: February 3, 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the safety, biomarkers, and efficacy of tominersen compared with placebo in participants with prodromal and early manifest Huntington's Disease.

NCT ID: NCT05686070 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Acute Non-cardioembolic Ischemic Stroke

A Study to Test Asundexian for Preventing a Stroke Caused by a Clot in Participants After an Acute Ischemic Stroke or After a High-risk Transient Ischemic Attack, a So-called Mini Stroke

OCEANIC-STROKE
Start date: January 26, 2023
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Researchers are looking for a better way to prevent an ischemic stroke which occurs when a blood clot travelled to the brain in people who within the last 72 hours had: - an acute stroke due to a blood clot that formed outside the heart (acute non-cardioembolic ischemic stroke), or - TIA/mini-stroke with a high risk of turning into a stroke (high-risk transient ischemic attack), and who are planned to receive standard of care therapy. Acute ischemic strokes or TIA/mini-stroke result from a blocked or reduced blood flow to a part of the brain. They are caused by blood clots that travel to the brain and block the vessels that supply it. If these blood clots form elsewhere than in the heart, the stroke is called non-cardioembolic. People who already had a non-cardioembolic stroke are more likely to have another stroke. This is why they are treated preventively with an antiplatelet therapy, the current standard of care. Antiplatelet medicines prevent platelets, components of blood clotting, from clumping together. Anticoagulants are another type of medicine that prevents blood clots from forming by interfering with a process known as coagulation (or blood clotting). The study treatment asundexian is a new type of anticoagulant currently under development to provide further treatment options. Asundexian aims to further improve the standard of care without increasing the risk of bleeding. The main purpose of this study is to learn whether asundexian works better than placebo at reducing ischemic strokes in participants who recently had a non-cardioembolic ischemic stroke or TIA/mini-stroke when given in addition to standard antiplatelet therapy. A placebo is a treatment that looks like a medicine but does not have any medicine in it. Another aim is to compare the occurrence of major bleeding events during the study between the asundexian and the placebo group. Major bleedings have a serious or even life-threatening impact on a person's health. Dependent on the treatment group, the participants will either take asundexian or placebo once a day for at least 3 months up to 31 months. Approximately every 3 months during the treatment period, either a phone call or a visit to the study site is scheduled on an alternating basis. In addition, one visit before and up to two visits after the treatment period are planned. During the study, the study team will: - Check vital signs such as blood pressure and heart rate - Examine the participants' heart health using an electrocardiogram (ECG) - Take blood samples - Ask the participants questions about how they are feeling and what adverse events they are having. An adverse event is any medical problem that a participant has during a study. Doctors keep track of all adverse events that happen in studies, even if they do not think the adverse events might be related to the study treatments. In addition, the participants will be asked to complete a questionnaire on quality of life at certain time points during the study.

NCT ID: NCT05685771 Recruiting - Healthy Clinical Trials

Sleep Modulation as Antidepressant Randomized Trial

SMART
Start date: February 20, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about the effects of phase-targeted auditory stimulation in depressed patients and healthy controls. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Is auditory down-phase stimulation efficient in improving depression symptoms as compared to sham stimulation? - Can mood and other outcomes be prospectively estimated by multi-parametric passive data? Participants will perform auditory stimulation using a wearable device at home and provide data on their phone usage and activity. Researchers will compare depressed patients and healthy participants to see if auditory down-phase stimulation effects them differently.

NCT ID: NCT05685238 Recruiting - Haemophilia A Clinical Trials

A Research Study Looking at Long-term Treatment With Mim8 in People With Haemophilia A (FRONTIER 4)

FRONTIER4
Start date: February 13, 2023
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study is looking at how Mim8 works in people with haemophilia A, who either have inhibitors or do not have inhibitors. Mim8 is a new medicine that will be used to avoid bleeding episodes. Mim8 works by replacing the function of the missing clotting factor VIII (FVIII). When and how often the participants will receive Mim8 in this study depends on the treatment participant receives in the current Mim8 study participant is taking part in. The study will last for up to 5.5 years. The duration of the study depends on when the participant enrolled in this study. The study will end if Mim8 is approved and marketed in participant's country during the study, or the study will end in 2028, whichever comes first. Mim8 will be injected under the skin with a thin needle either once a week, once every two weeks or once a month. Participants will get up to 262 injections; the number of injections depends on how often participants will get injections. While taking part in this study, there are some restrictions about what medicine participants can use. The study doctor will tell the participants more about this. In case the participants experience bleeds, these can be treated with additional haemostatic medicine as agreed with the study doctor. Female participants cannot take part if they are pregnant, breast-feeding or plan to get pregnant during the study period.

NCT ID: NCT05685069 Recruiting - Silent Stroke Clinical Trials

Prevalence of Attributable Etiology and Modifiable Stroke Risk Factors in Patients With Covert Brain Infarctions

CBI-Registry
Start date: March 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The CBI registry is a prospective, interdisciplinary, multimodal observational registry of patients with covert brain infarction. Methods: A standardized workup in analogy to manifest ischemic stroke including cerebral MRI, long-term rhythm monitoring (3 x 7 days ECG), echocardiography, laboratory work-up and risk factor assessment as well as noninvasive angiography of the cervical and intracranial arteries will be performed.

NCT ID: NCT05684523 Completed - Clinical trials for Cognitive Dysfunction

Feasibility Study on the Use of Redormin®500 on Day-time Cognition

Start date: March 1, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Randomized, double-blind, parallel groups, placebo-controlled, baseline/run-in period of 21 days followed by trial period of 21 days, digital phenotyping (sleep, cognitive/psychological parameters and HRV). The aim of this study is to determine the feasibility of investigating the effects of Redormin® 500 on day-time cognition and to assess psychological parameters (subjective cognitive performance, tiredness, mood, stress level, quality of life, motivation), in people with occasional sleep problems. Sleep tracking data will be collected using consumer devices of the Charge series by Fitbit.

NCT ID: NCT05684055 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Arterial Hypertension

"Community-based, eHealth Supported Management of Cardiovascular Risk Factors by Lay Village Health Workers (ComBaCaL aHT TwiC 1 & ComBaCaL aHT TwiC 2)

Start date: September 9, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

ComBaCaL aHT TwiC 1 and aHT TwiC 2 are two cluster-randomized controlled trials that are identical in intervention, design and endpoints. TwiC 1 enrols individuals with uncomplicated aHT with baseline BP values above treatment targets and the hypothesis is that in intervention clusters where community-based treatment is offered, a higher proportion will have controlled aHT at twelve months' follow-up as compared to control clusters where participants are referred to the facility for further care after diagnosis. TwiC 2 enrols individuals with uncomplicated pharmacologically controlled aHT with the hypothesis that the offer of community-based antihypertensive treatment is non-inferior to facility-based care with regard to BP control rates at twelve months. The trials are nested within the ComBaCaL (Community-Based Chronic disease care Lesotho) cohort study (EKNZ ID 2022-00058, clinicaltrials.gov ID NCT05596773), a platform for the investigation of chronic diseases and their management in rural Lesotho that is maintained by local chronic care village health workers (CC-VHWs). 50% of the villages being part of the overarching ComBaCaL cohort will be randomly allocated to receive the TwiC intervention. The non-selected villages will serve as comparators and follow the regular ComBaCaL cohort activities conducted by CC-VHWs, including screening, diagnosis, standardized counselling and referral to a health facility for further therapeutic management. The TwiC intervention will be offered to all eligible people living with aHT in the sampled intervention villages. Individuals with uncomplicated uncontrolled and uncomplicated controlled aHT at baseline will be enrolled in aHT TwiC 1 and aHT 2 respectively. In case of complicated disease, unclear diagnosis, or presence of clinical alarm signs or symptoms, participants will be referred to the closest health facility for further investigation.

NCT ID: NCT05684042 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Distal Radius Fracture

Fracture Registry University Hospital Basel

Start date: June 9, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The primary goal of this research project is to measure the accuracy of the classifications of the distal radius fracture in the fracture database. The evaluation of the extracted data analyzes the validity of the fracture classifications that the medical staff carry out in everyday clinical practice. Endpoint of this project is the reclassification of the selected fractures by an in-house group of experts in order to be able to carry out a subsequent statistical evaluation. It is analyzed whether there are significant deviations between the classifications of the expert group and the fracture database.

NCT ID: NCT05682378 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Heterozygous or Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia

Long-term Safety and Tolerability of Inclisiran in Participants With HeFH or HoFH Who Have Completed the Adolescent ORION-16 or ORION-13 Studies

V-PEDS-OLE
Start date: February 10, 2023
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this open-label, single arm, multicenter extension study is to evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of inclisiran in participants with HeFH or HoFH who have completed the ORION-16 or ORION-13 studies.

NCT ID: NCT05681988 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Intracerebral Haemorrhage

Early Minimally Invasive Image Guided Endoscopic Evacuation of Intracerebral Haemorrhage (EMINENT-ICH)

EMINENT-ICH
Start date: January 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is an open-labelled, single centre randomised controlled trial evaluating the efficacy of early minimally invasive image-guided hematoma evacuation in combination with the current best medical treatment compared to best medical treatment alone in improving functional outcome rates at 6 months after initial treatment in patients with spontaneous supratentorial intracerebral haemorrhage.