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.
An open-label, controlled, randomised, multi-centre Phase 3 trial evaluating renal function in patients with severe anti-GBM disease comparing imlifidase and standard of care (SoC) with SoC alone. All patients will remain in the trial for 24 months.
Pregnancies in women with pre-existing diabetes are considered "high risk" pregnancies, poses daily clinical challenges and in terms of research - a number of unanswered questions. Therefore, the investigators wish to establish a nationwide cohort of pregnancies complicated by pre-existing diabetes - the Danish Diabetes Birth Registry (DDBR2) The DDBR2 registry comprises all types of pre-existing diabetes including T1D, T2D and other types (as MODY), generating a nationwide cohort of mother/partner/children trios with accessible registry-, clinical data and biological biobank samples. This will enable the investigators to use data longitudinally to examine short- and long-term outcomes of pregnancies in women with diabetes.
A study involving primary data collection within real-world settings of participants who initiate treatment with tezepelumab for severe uncontrolled asthma. This study will complement evidence obtained from randomized controlled trials and provide new data focusing on the holistic and patient reported outcome (PRO).
The POCUS PATHWAY-trial is a multi-center, randomized, investigator-initiated, open labelled, pragmatic, controlled trial of a point-of-care ultrasound-driven diagnostic pathway vs standard diagnostic pathway in dyspneic emergency department patients. The primary outcome will be 24-hour hospital stay and 642 patients will be included. Key secondary outcomes include overall hospital length of stay, image resources, and 72-hour revisits.
Paediatric Autism Communication Therapy (PACT) is a naturalistic developmental behavioural interventions to reduce autism symptoms. The aim of this trial is to assess the beneficial and harmful effects of PACT in 2-6 year-old children with a recent diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of efavaleukin alfa in participants with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis (UC).
The goal of this study is to investigate whether patient-tailored follow-up for patients treated with transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) can prevent re-hospitalisation and improve quality of life compared with the standard follow-up program. The rationale of this study is the persistently high rate of re-hospitalisation after TAVI, which increases the risk of mortality and diminishes the patient-evaluated quality of life. Our hypothesis is that patient-tailored follow-up for patients treated with TAVI will reduce the rate of re-hospitalisation after the TAVI-procedure and improve quality of life. The primary endpoints are the rate of re-hospitalisation within 90 days of the procedure and quality of life adjusted life years at 90-day follow-up.
To investigate whether sildenafil (phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitor) induces migraine-like headache in people with persistent post-traumatic headache (PTH) attributed to mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI).
This study will look at the effects of CagriSema on cardiovascular events (for example heart attack and stroke) in people living with cardiovascular disease. Participants will either get CagriSema or a dummy medicine (also called "placebo") which has no effect on the body. Which treatment participants will get will be decided by chance. Participant's chance of getting CagriSema or placebo is the same. Participants will inject the study medicine once a week. The study medicine will be injected briefly with a thin needle, typically in the stomach, thighs or upper arms. The study will last for up to 4.5 years.
In summary, there is a compelling rationale for investigating venetoclax as an intervention to sensitise virus-expressing cells to apoptosis and thereby reduce the size of the latent HIV reservoir. While this concept may ultimately need to be tested in the setting of concomitant latency reversal, the investigators propose to initially establish the safety of venetoclax in PLWH on ART. The investigators will use this study to also investigate effects of venetoclax monotherapy on proapoptotic pathways, immune effector function and HIV persistence in PLWH on ART and through these studies establish the rationale for subsequent studies testing venetoclax in combination with an LRA.