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 study aims to investigate the metabolic and cardiovascular effects of classical resistance training with high loads and blood-flow restricted training (BFRT) with low loads in individuals with type 2 diabetes over 12 weeks.
Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) has been shown in clinical trials, registries, and meta-analyses to reduce recurrent events after PCI. This is accomplished by improving the angiographic result with lesion and vessel assessment to guide stent selection and implantation and intravascular imaging following stent implantation to ensure an adequate treatment endpoint has been achieved. Despite extensive literature supporting the use of IVUS in PCI, utilization remains low in the United States. An increasing number of high-risk or complex lesions are being treated with PCI and we hypothesize that the impact of IVUS in these complex lesions will be of increased importance in reducing clinical adverse events while remaining cost effective.
Evaluate the safety and tolerability of AMG 509 in adult participants and determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) or recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D).
This is an international multicenter, open-label, randomized phase III trial including three sequential randomizations to assess efficacy of induction and consolidation chemotherapies and radiotherapy for patients with high-risk neuroblastoma.
The best approach for the treatment of perforated diverticulitis of the sigmoid colon is still under debate. Concurrent techniques are 1) resection with primary colorectal anastomosis with or without additional loop ileostomy; 2) end colostomy (Hartmann´s procedure); 3) Damage control strategy; 4) laparoscopic lavage and placement of a drainage. It is hypothesized, that the use of the damage control strategy leads to a significant reduction of the stoma rate. The damage control strategy constitutes a two stage procedure. Emergency surgery: limited resection of the diseased colonic segment with oral and aboral blind closure, abdominal lavage, temporary vacuum assisted abdominal closure Second look surgery (48-72 hours later): Reexploration with 1. definite reconstruction (Colorectal anastomosis -/+ diverting ileostomy vs. end colostomy) 2. lavage, vacuum assisted abdominal closure, third look 72 hours after emergency surgery Within the study, data of DCS-procedures will be collected retrospectively in a multicentric and transnational approach. Those will be compared to a cohort of patients treated with a "no-DCS"-technique (resection with primary anastomosis or Hartmann´s procedure).
The study is a randomized, open, prospective phase II study. The aim of the study is to evaluate the safety and feasibility of a hypofractionated, accelerated radiation approach based on the incidence of grade 3-5 NCI Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (NCI-CTC-AE ) toxicity and / or termination of the planned therapy for any reason with neoadjuvant radiation with active beam guidance of the retroperitoneal Sarcomas using protons or carbon ions before a subsequent tumor resection.
The study aims to identify and systematically characterize Parkinson's patients with mutations in the LRRK2 gene. In about 90% of Parkinson's patients the cause of the disease is unclear. Based on current knowledge, it can be assumed that there are several causes and that the causes may be differ between patients; this makes research into the pathogenesis and possible therapies very difficult. In the case of monogenic Parkinson's diseases, which are due to changes in one gene (e.g. LRRK2), the function of the gene and possible disease mechanisms can be investigated. LRRK2-associated Parkinson's syndrome is clinically indistinguishable from idiopathic Parkinson's disease. It is inherited autosomal dominant, that means if one of the two gene copies is altered, the disease occurs. However, the disease does not occur in every mutation carrier, the penetrance is reduced and the mechanisms for that are still unclear. Ideally, knowledge of what influences penetrance could make it possible to exert targeted influence and prevent the disease. The comprehensive investigation of mechanisms of reduced penetrance but also of the effects of the mutation itself requires systematic investigations of as many affected persons as possible. We therefore aim to identify 4,000 people internationally, of them 1,500 with LRRK2-associated Parkinson's syndrome, 500 with LRRK2-mutations but without Parkinson's symptoms, 500 without mutations and without Parkinson's symptoms, 500 Parkinson patients with mutations in other genes than LRRK2 and 1,000 patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease from the same populations. The participants will undergo a comprehensive survey on Parkinson's symptoms, concomitant diseases, environmental factors and medication and there is the possibility of more detailed genetic examinations. Participants will be asked to donate samples of blood, urine and household dust.
Adenoid cystic tumors are rare tumors of the head and neck region. Despite their slow growth, re-irradiation is often necessary due to the high metastatic risk. Patients are usually irradiated with photons or, as here at the Heidelberg University Hospital, with a combination of carbon ions and photons. So far, there is no data from Europe available for the sole irradiation with carbon ions. The present ACCO (Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma and Carbon ion Only irradiation) study, a prospective, open-label, phase II, single-arm, investigator-initiated study, will therefore investigate the sole radiotherapy of carbon ions in this tumor entity. Irradiation is applied - significantly shorter than the combination therapy - in about 4 weeks (22 fractions); patients are followed up for further 5 years after the start of therapy. Carbon ions alone are expected to increase local tumor control rates from 60% to 70% after 5 years (primary objective criterion of this study). In order to reject the null hypothesis with a power of 80% and a significance level of 5%, 175 patients are included (including a drop-out rate of 15%). Secondary objective criteria are progression-free survival, overall survival, acute and late toxicity, and quality of life.
Epileptic seizures are one of the frequent complications in patients with traumatic brain injury; the incidence lies approximately at 20%. Particularly, acute subdural hematoma (aSDH) is one of the most important predictors for epileptic seizures, which is besides other parameters like age, preoperative Glasgow coma scale, cerebral herniation, hematoma volume and time to operation, associated with worse neurological outcome. In a recent systematic review, the mean incidence of epileptic seizures in aSDH was 28%, whereas one retrospective study focusing on EEG-diagnostic reported very high incidence of epileptiform abnormalities on surface EEG in 87% of patients with aSDH, wherefore the question rises, if the incidence of epileptic seizures is underestimated. Despite successful evacuation of subdural hematoma, approximately one third of patients show no clinical improvement without medical explanation. Routinely, surface spot EEG is performed to detect epileptic seizures; however the sensitivity is limited due to the skin-bone barrier and the short duration of recording. Furthermore, surface EEG is not always available, for example during the night or at weekends, which is an additional limitation for the loss of treatment timing as well. Spot surface EEG will record for only 20 to 30 minutes in contrast to continuous EEG recordings that are performed for hours or days. Due to the clinical relevance of epileptic seizures, several studies investigated the benefit of prophylactic antiepileptic treatment. To date, there is only one recommendation from the Brain Trauma Foundation at evidence class II to treat patients with severe traumatic brain injury with prophylactic antiepileptic treatment during the first week. Beyond the interval; there was no clinical benefit for patients selected. Still, there are some limitations´wherefore the clinical use of prophylactic antiepileptic treatment varies between clinicians and countries. At that time, the standard medication was phenytoin which has several side effects, but to date, there are several new intravenous antiepileptic drugs with comparable effect but better safety profile. On the other hand, there was no sifferentiation made between high-risked seizure prone patients, like patients with aSDH, and low-risked patients which is one of the limiting factors to support a general recommendation. Therefore the role of prophylactic antiepileptic treatment is still questionable. In the clinical routine, invasive EEG-electrodes are commonly used to detect epileptic focus. The benefit of those electrodes is the real time analysis in case of seizure occurrence compared to surface EEG. Moreover, therapeutic effect is directly visible through the monitoring. Therefore the idea of this study was to make a real time analysis possible for patient with TBI, particularly aSDH, to have diagnostic and therapeutic real time monitoring detecting subclinical seizures.
International registry to collect prospective treatment and outcomes data on specific, key non-pathological fractures in children with open physes. Data will be collected during follow-up visits according to standard of care at 3 to 8 weeks, 3, 6, 12 and 24 months