There are about 11304 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Denmark. 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.
Wheelchair bound patients often have pain in lower back and glutes, constipation and reduced quality of life - symptoms that exercise might ameliorate. However, in wheelchair bound patients with muscular dystrophies and cerebral palsy only very little research is done on exercise. We thus wish to investigate effects of cycle exercise in wheelchair bound patients with muscular dystrophy and cerebral palsy.
Study aims to determine if functional lung avoidance based on perfusion single photon emission (SPECT)/CT scan, improves toxicity outcomes for patients with advanced lung cancer undergoing chemo-radiotherapy. Functional avoidance implies a dose plan that takes functional distribution in the lung into account, and avoids highly functional lung volumes sparing them from radiation.
This study aims to investigate structural and functional cerebral changes using magnetic resonance imaging before and after treatment with erenumab in patients with migraine.
Treatment for childhood cancer causes treatment-related acute adverse events such as muscle weakness and physical incompetence. With long admissions, isolation, and long-term bed rest, this means reduced physical activity and, ultimately, gross motor functioning development is affected. Furthermore, the children participate less in sport and leisure activities, inhibiting social skills, and the children feel isolated from peers. The above makes it difficult for children to return to everyday activities. Physical activity in the form of play and movement activities is essential for preschool children's gross motor, social, and personal development- a development where parents play a crucial role. Replay is a randomized controlled trial that will include 84 children with cancer aged 1-5 years at the University Hospital Copenhagen, Rigshospitalet. The children are included at the treatment initiation and are randomized to either the intervention group or the control group. The intervention consists of six months of daily structured play-based physical activity, including daily parent administered play and movement and three weekly group-based play and movement sessions at the hospital during admissions. Gross motor and physical function is measured with 1) Peabody Developmental Motor Scales, Second Edition (PDMS-2), Pediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory (PEDI), Handgrip strength, and a six-minute walk test. The assessment time points are baseline (initiated timepoint), 3- and 6 months (endpoint) after initiated treatment. The intervention group will be observed and invited to participate in qualitative interviews. The control group will receive usual care and specific physiotherapy if needed.
An international consortium of leading medical experts in the field of chronic respiratory disease, the research team of Galenus Health and the non-profit organization EUFOREA (European Forum for Research and Education in Allergy and Airway diseases) has been conceived to conduct real-life outcome research. The Galenus Health digital platform consisting of a mobile application for patients and an online dashboard for physicians will be implemented in each of the participating centres. The data will be centralized in a pseudonymized database and will be the basis of the Chronic RhinoSinusitis Outcome Registry.
The objective of this study is to understand the relationship between DMD and BMD brain comorbidities, and the location of the gene mutation which causes the disease.
The aim of this study is to document an optimized pharmacologic treatment for patients with Takotsubo Syndrome. There is currently no published documentation in a large number of patients. The study is a Randomized Registry Clinical Trial and in total 1000 patients registered in SWEDEHEART will be included.
The purpose of this trial is to measure the safety and effectiveness of epcoritamab (EPKINLY™), either by itself or together with other therapies, when treating subjects with B-cell non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (B-NHL). The aim of the first part of the trial is to identify the most appropriate dose of epcoritamab, and the aim of the second part of the trial is to assess the selected epcoritamab dose in a larger group of participants with B-NHL. All participants in this trial will receive either epcoritamab alone, or epcoritamab combined with another standard treatment regimen, with a total of 10 different treatment arms being studied. Trial details include: - The total trial duration will be up to 6 years. - The treatment duration for each participant depends upon which arm of treatment they are assigned to receive, but will be no more than 3 years. - The visit frequency for each participant depends upon which arm of treatment they are assigned to receive, but will be weekly to start for all participants, then will decrease to either: every 2 weeks, or every 3 weeks, or every 4 weeks, or every 8 weeks. - All participants will receive active drug; no one will be given placebo. Participants who receive treatment with epcoritamab will have it injected right under the skin. Participants will receive a different regimen of epcoritamab depending upon which arm of treatment they are assigned. Participants who receive standard treatments will have IV infusions and/or oral administration of those treatments. Participants will receive a different standard treatment regimen depending upon which arm of treatment they are assigned. Arm 9 (follicular lymphoma (FL)) is still open for enrolment of new patients, while the other arms have closed their recruitment.
The primary aim of the current study is to assess the effect of continuous wireless vital signs monitoring with generation of real-time alerts compared to blinded monitoring without alerts on the cumulative duration of any severely deviating vital signs in patients admitted to general hospital wards with acute medical conditions. Patients admitted with medical conditions represents a large and heterogenous group occupying a substantial part of the total in-patient capacity in the Danish hospitals today. The hypothesize is that continuous vital signs monitoring, and real-time alerts will reduce the cumulative duration of severely deviating vital signs.
The purpose of this observational study is to assess the role of plasma concentration monitoring of treatment drugs for patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) in terms of efficacy and side effects. Furthermore, the investigators examines the role of anti-drug antibodies and receptor polymorphisms in CTLA-4 and PD-1 receptors in treatment failure among patients with mRCC treated with check point immunotherapy. Moreover, polymorphisms in the UGT1A1 gene will be correlated with the pazopanib treatment dose.