There are about 25560 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Germany. 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.
The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis has been found to be a key system involved in heart failure disease progression and it may be inhibited by renal sympathetic denervation. Therefore, a clear need exists for further strategies to beneficially manipulate the sympathetic activation that is characteristic of the heart failure disease process. The combined experience in the pilot studies and the EU randomized, controlled study indicates that the Paradise Catheter System can safely denervate renal sympathetic nerves of the kidney without significant periprocedural complications. Preliminary results of a pilot study of catheter-based renal denervation in a small number of CHF patients did not show evidence of safety issues but suggest improvements in CHF symptoms. This trial will explore the safety and feasibility of renal denervation in a significantly higher number of patients with chronic heart failure. Both inter-individual and intra-individual controls will be used in order to obtain sufficient data and to in order to enable both treatment and control group to receive renal denervation. Additionally, this feasibility trial to describe the safety and feasibility of renal denervation in patients with elevated sympathetic activity as in patients with chronic heart failure, will further the understanding of the role of renal nerves in the control of chronic heart failure and the pathogenesis of both ventricular remodeling and cardio-renal syndrome.
Achievement of tumor-free resection margin with the largest possible remnant liver parenchyma is the major challenge in hepatic surgery. Therefore, perioperative tumor detection, anatomical mapping of liver segments and also nearby structures are vital to improve the short- and long-term surgical outcomes. Over last decades, several real-time methods have been introduced for this purpose. These methods are mostly based on the utilizing of traceable dyes, which are excreted into the biliary tract. With the advances in minimal invasive surgery and video technology, indocyanine green became the most used dye in this manner. It has been demonstrated that using indocyanine green, small liver tumors can be detected, which cannot be identified using conventional intraoperative methods. Based on the literature, the reported sensitivity of tumor detection using indocyanine green is ranging between 98%-100%, while conventional methods could not reach 90% sensitivity. Posthepatectomy bile leakage, as well as in- or outflow distributions due to the potential vascular reconstructions, are some of the most common complications that can occur especially after complex liver surgeries. Beside the abovementioned advantages of indocyanine green, several researchers have also shown the feasibility of indocyanine green to identify the intraoperative bile leaks and any in- or outflow distributions. Nevertheless, laparoscopic assisted liver surgery is technically challenging, mostly because of the restricted degrees of instrument movements, camera instability, and loss of depth perception. In particular, the loss of depth perception and inaccurate object localization can lead to intraoperative complications and a long learning curve. Advances in video technology, namely 4K ultra-high-definition imaging have been developed to reduce perioperative complications and to shorten the learning curve during laparoscopic liver surgery. This is the first prospective study evaluating the impact of indocyanine green imaging during 4K laparoscopic liver surgery on real-time tumor detection and surgical outcomes.
This randomized prospective open-label phase 2 trial testes the safety and feasibility of a hypofractionated accelerated neoadjuvant proton or carbon ion radiotherapy based on the rate of wound healing disorders from beginning of radiotherapy to maximum 120 days after the planned tumor resection or discontinuation of treatment due to any reason. The treatment is of shorter duration (2-3 weeks vs. 5 weeks standard treatment), which should please most patients and thus enhance quality of life. The treatment regimen furthermore promises a reduced rate of late side effects and significant optimization of the current treatment standards. A phase II trial is mandatory not only for obtaining the safety and feasibility data, but also in order to prepare a concurrent phase III trial. Due to the low incidence of soft tissue sarcoma, only a well prepared multicenter study has a chance to be successfully completed based on previous experiences in trials for seldom tumor entities.
This is a Phase 2, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of sotatercept versus placebo in adults with Cpc-PH due to HFpEF. The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of sotatercept versus placebo in adults with Cpc-PH due to HFpEF. Efficacy is measured by change from baseline in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR, primary endpoint) and 6-minute walk distance (6MWD, key secondary endpoint).
The aim of the study is to investigate effects of brain stimulation-assisted cognitive training in patients with persistent subjective or objective cognitive impairment after polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-positive COVID-19 disease.
The immune system is thought to play a key role in the development of liver inflammation and subsequent liver fibrosis or cirrhosis. In the case of viral hepatitis and autoimmune hepatitis, for example, numerous studies have focused on the acquired antigen-specific immunity. However, the liver is the site of increased occurrence of the components of the innate immune response (NK and NKT cells) and, in contrast to T cells, these T cells, these do not require antigen presentation. Therefore, the present study was designed to determine which cellular components of the (NK, NKT, dendritic cells, macrophages) or the acquired immune response (CD4, CD8) or which network of immune cells is involved in the immunopathogenesis of progressive liver inflammation or the development of liver fibrosis. The aim is to identify lymphocyte populations that exhibit either prognostically favorable or unfavorable characteristics. This should allow conclusions to be drawn for a more targeted and individualized therapy of the respective chronic liver diseases.
The main aim of the study is to find out how frequently adults with at least one psychiatric condition have ADHD (but have not been diagnosed with ADHD before) and to describe the quality of life of these adults who have been diagnosed with ADHD. To find out how often ADHD is not diagnosed in these adults could provide awareness about this condition and could help to improve preventing underdiagnosis.
Rebirth active SCHOOL 2.0 is a physical activity intervention program and about to be realised at 40 primary schools in Lower Saxony Germany. Half of all schools will be assigned to the intervention program or to wait for one year before starting with the movement program. After one and two years, the follow up will take place. After completing baseline examinations (i.e. physical and cognitive functions, physical activity questionnaires) the intervention program will start for one year. The intervention program is going to be designed with the goal of implementing physical activity of 60 minutes per day. For the main module of movement impulses, the pupils will perform a 5-minute exercise in every lesson, realised by the teachers.
Background: In patients with acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), the amount of infarcted myocardium (infarct size) is known to be a major predictor for adverse remodeling and recurrent adverse cardiovascular events. Effective cardio-protective strategies with the aim of reducing infarct size are therefore of great interest. Local and systemic inflammation influences the fate of ischemic myocardium and thus, adverse remodeling and clinical outcome. C-reactive protein (CRP) also acts as a potential mechanistic mediator that adversely affects the amount of irreversible myocardial tissue damage after acute myocardial infarction. Objective: The main objectives of the current study are to investigate the efficacy of selective CRP apheresis, using the PentraSorb®-CRP system, as an adjunctive therapy to standard of care for patients with acute STEMI treated with primary PCI. Design: Investigator-initiated, prospective, randomized, open-label (outcome assessors masked), controlled, multicenter, two group trial with a two-stage adaptive design. Innovation: Selective CRP apheresis offers potential to decrease infarct size and consequently improve outcome after PCI for STEMI. This is the first randomized trial investigating the impact of selective CRP apheresis on infarct size in post-STEMI patients. In perspective, the study design allows furthermore to collect robust evidence for the design of a definitive outcome study.
The EU-ROP registry is a European wide multicenter non-interventional observational registry study intended to run open-ended in as many countries as possible including infants treated for retinopathy of prematurity irrespective of the used treatment modality. The registry is strictly observational; only clinical routine data is collected, no study-specific examinations or interventions are to be performed. The aim of the EU-ROP registry is to collect information on as many patients as possible treated for ROP in Europe. Both the number of study centers as well as the number of patients to be included into the registry are not limited. The primary objective is to describe the typical clinical features of infants with severe ROP, variations in phenotype, and the clinical progression of the disease over time (natural history) in different European countries as well as to study treatment patterns, follow-up patterns, as well as long-term outcomes.