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.
Background: Concussion affects around 25 000 people each year in Denmark. A large research initiative (GAIN 2.0) has been established, and the current study is a part of this initiative. Aims: 1. To develop and test the efficacy of a novel intervention for people with persistent post-concussional mild-to-moderate symptoms: "Get going After concussion Lite" (GAIN Lite). 2. To increase the knowledge about the target group by investigating the association of physical activity, digital behaviour, and symptom load. Methods: A randomized controlled trial, comparing GAIN Lite to enhanced usual care. 100 adults diagnosed with a concussion at hospitals in Central Denmark Region or referred from general practitioners will be recruited. GAIN Lite is a digital intervention, and the primary outcome is the severity of post-concussional symptoms. A prospective cohort study will be performed to investigate the association between physical activity, cognitive processing, and symptom load.
Specialized palliative care (SPC) plays an important role in providing patient-centered care and support to informal caregiver, besides establishing/intensifying/coordinating collaboration with primary and secondary health care sectors (hospital nurse/district nurse and general practitioner/oncologist) to improve care and support for patients and burdened informal caregiver. This study proposes to develop a SPC intervention enriched with a dyadic psychological intervention for patients with advanced cancer and their informal caregiver delivered by telemedicine at home (TeleSPC). It is our hypothesis that the intervention can enhance patient-centered care at home, support their informal caregiver, and improve relations/integration between the SPC teams, oncologic teams, the general practitioners and district nurses.
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a global health concern because more than 10% of the world's population have it, its prevalence is increasing, and CKD is an important contributor to morbidity and mortality for this population. The majority of the people with CKD aren't aware and there are not available tools for early CKD detection and for an accurate prediction on these patients. Many CKD patients exhibit progressive renal dysfunction, demonstrating a failure of current, non-specific therapeutic strategies. Better methods are urgently needed for i) early diagnosis of CKD, and prediction of its progression for improved stratification of patients and better targeting of current treatments; and ii) to directly assess structural and functional responses of the kidney to new therapies and identify those patients who respond. Over the past decade, renal Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) has emerged as a promising technique for improved understanding and characterisation of renal pathophysiology. Compared to histopathology, MRI is non-invasive and avoids sampling bias by characterising the entire kidney with high spatial resolution. In spite of a number of single centre studies showing renal MRI feasibility and potential to address a number of key clinical questions, current methodological differences across studies hinder reliable comparisons of the results, which can only be regarded as preliminary. Standardization of acquisition and processing protocols across centres is therefore needed, and this will also lead to the possibility to provide preliminary data of the multiparametric renal MRI clinical validity and utility. The purpose of this study is to standardize, assess the feasibility and provide preliminary evidence of clinical validity and utility of the multiparametric renal MRI. To reach this goal two groups of subjects are involved: - Group 1 (healthy volunteers). In this group the repeatibility and reproducibility of multiparametric renal MRI will be assessed. - Group 2 (CKD patients). In this group the feasibility, the acceptability, the reproducibility and the preliminary clinical validity of multiparametric renal MRI will be assessed.
A global, multi-center, Disease Monitoring Study (DMS) in participants with Autosomal Dominant Hypocalcemia Type 1 (ADH1) or Autosomal Dominant Hypocalcemia Type 2 (ADH2) designed to characterize ADH1 and ADH2 disease presentation and progression through retrospective (past) and longitudinal prospective (over time into the future) data collection.
In septic shock there is growing evidence of a state of hemodynamic "disconnection" with seemingly adequate macrocirculatory values despite actual microcirculation failing to meet cellular demand. Norepinephrine (NE) is recommended as first choice vasoactive agent for the treatment of septic shock. However, the dynamic effects of NE on macro- and microcirculation and perfusion parameters has not been described in detail in the context of septic shock, precluding rational individualized titration of NE and fluids, as recommended recently. In the present prospective observational multicenter study in adult septic shock patients, we intend to explore the effects of NE on preload dependency and tissue perfusion by evaluating the correlation and potential discrepancies between macro- and microcirculation both during titration of NE and after fluid resuscitation. The conclusions drawn from our study will contribute to the physiological knowledge necessary for establishing individualized evidence-based bedside management of hemodynamics in the setting of septic shock.
Phase 1-2 study including a dose escalation safety and proof of concept phase (Stage 1, open label), followed by a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled confirmatory phase (Stage 2)
Aim: To compare the surgical method of En Bloc resection to the conventional transurethral resection of non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) in terms of complete removal of tumour, specimen quality, and pathological certainty. Background: NMIBC is a common disease with a 5-year recurrence rate reported as high as 64%. The cornerstone in the treatment of NMIBC is transurethral resection (TURB) where the tumour is dissected in pieces, removed from the bladder, and pathologically examined for potential muscle invasion. As the tumour is fragmented before removal, the method violates basic oncological principles and compromises pathological examination. Hence, TURB is possibly part of the mechanism causing recurrences. En Bloc resection (EBR), where the tumour is removed in toto, can potentially overcome the flaws of conventional TURB, but large randomized trials are needed. Methods: This project will be a multicentre randomised controlled clinical trial comparing EBR to conventional TURB. Patients with suspected NMIBC tumours with largest tumour diameter ≥1cm and ≤6cm will be randomised to either the intervention group, thus undergoing EBR, or the control group, undergoing conventional TURB. The investigators intend to include 220 patients in total, 110 patients in each group. The RCT will be initiated in 2022. Perspectives: If EBR can be shown to remove bladder tumours with better pathological quality and certainty, this could potentially spare patients from undergoing surgeries in the future, thereby reducing costs for both patients and society.
Multinational, prospective, proof of concept phase II, double-blinded, sham-controlled, randomized clinical trial (RCT) to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Remote Ischaemic PreConditioning (RIPC) in Lymphoma patients receiving anthracyclines.
This is a first-in human, open-label, Phase 1 dose-escalation study in order to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and/or recommended Phase 2 dose (RP2D) for intravenous (IV) and/or subcutaneous (SC) dosing schemes of this combination treatment, and to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and preliminary anti-tumor activity of this combination treatment in participants with relapsed/refractory B-cell non Hodgkin lymphoma (r/r NHL).
Coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) is a non-invasive method for visualization of the coronary arteries. The anatomical information obtained by CCTA, however, is rarely integrated into a subsequent coronary intervention. The CT-FOCI trial aims to evaluate, in a randomized setting, the benefit of implementing the information obtained by CCTA as part of the invasive examination using a CT-guided algorithm (CTGA). Patients (n=120) with symptoms of stable angina pectoris will be randomized 1:1 after CCTA has determined at least 1 stenosis with luminal diameter reduction of minimum 50% in a vessel segment > 2 mm in diameter. Subsequent, invasive examination and intervention will utilize the information available according to randomization. Primary efficacy endpoints are a reduction in patient radiation exposure, procedure time, procedural utensils, and contrast use. Secondary endpoints is significant stenosis in the non-target vessel, only available in the conventional group.