There are about 25435 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in United Kingdom. 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.
Non-interventional, multi-country, multi-centre cohort study based on existing data from medical records (paper or electronic) or electronic health records of patients with advanced NSCLC harbouring EGFR mutations and treated with an EGFR-TKI
The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of gut microbial metabolism of flaxseed lignans on cardiovascular health. Enterolactone is the main gut microbial metabolite of lignans. The study population will be stratified in low and high enterolactone producers and will investigate whether high producers will have greater benefits than low producers, and whether low producers may become high producers after daily consumption of lignans over 8 weeks. The investigators will evaluate changes in endothelial function, blood pressure, arterial stiffness, insulin resistance, lipid profile and gut microbiome composition after 8 weeks daily consumption of flaxseed lignans.
Most premature babies require oxygen therapy. There is uncertainty about what oxygen levels are the best. The oxygen levels in the blood are measured using a monitor called a saturation monitor and the oxygen the baby breathes is adjusted to keep the level in a target range. Although there is evidence that lower oxygen levels maybe harmful, it is not known how high they need to be for maximum benefit. Very high levels are also harmful. Saturation monitors are not very good for checking for high oxygen levels. For this a different kind of monitor, called a transcutaneous monitor, is better. Keeping oxygen levels stable is usually done by nurses adjusting the oxygen levels by hand (manual control). There is also equipment available that can do this automatically (servo control). It is not known which is best. Studies of automated control have shown that infants spend more time within their intended target oxygen saturation range. These have not included measurements of transcutaneous oxygen. The investigators aim to show the transcutaneous oxygen levels as well as the oxygen saturation levels when babies have their oxygen adjusted manually or automatically.
Cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus and associated diseases combined are the leading health burden and cause of mortality worldwide; therefore, the necessity for an intervention is paramount. Dietary interventions to improve cardiometabolic health are highly sought after as they possess less risk than pharmacological drugs. Anthocyanins, found in high quantities in both tart cherries and blueberries are powerful antioxidants, that are potentially capable of improving cardiometabolic dysfunction. However, to date, no research has explored the cardiometabolic responses to tart cherry and blueberry supplementation. Therefore, the primary purpose of the proposed investigation is to test the ability of oral tart cherry and blueberry supplementation to improve cardiometabolic parameters in healthy individuals.
This study evaluated the efficacy and safety of ipatasertib in combination with atezolizumab and paclitaxel in locally advanced or metastatic Triple-Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) previously untreated in this setting.
Long-term pain affects one-third of the United Kingdom population and can be very disabling. People experiencing long-term pain often suffer from disturbed sleep because of their pain symptoms, and disturbed sleep can then make their pain symptoms worse. Managing long-term pain is also very costly to the National Health Service. The most common treatment is prescribed medicines, but these do not always work and can have serious side-effects for some patients. The investigators have been developing an alternative approach for treating long-term pain. This approach uses simple non-invasive tools to promote some kinds of brain activity over others. It involves patients using headphones to listen to some specific sounds, or a headset with lights flashing at particular frequencies. The studies undertaken so far seem to show that doing this can change how the brain responds to pain. It potentially offers an inexpensive yet effective way of reducing pain and improving sleep for patients with long-term pain. There are a few small studies that support this approach and more work is needed. The next step is to find out whether these tools can be reliably used in home settings, how people feel about using this approach, and to gather information to design a larger trial of this technology. Therefore the aim of this study is to test the suitability and acceptability of these home-based tools with individuals with long-term pain. Up to 30 participants with long-term pain and pain-related sleep disturbance will use the tools for at least 20 minutes at bed time every day for 4 weeks. The investigators will interview them to ask about their experiences of using the tools, and their feedback and suggestions on how the approach should be developed. The investigators will measure changes in the nature of participants' pain, sleep, fatigue and mood. These findings will inform the planning and design of a future much larger study to test this technology. The investigators will make sure that findings from this study are shared widely within the National Health Service and beyond among patient groups, professionals, charities, specialist centres and commissioners.
An international, non-interventional, prospective, community recruited, longitudinal, lifestyle study which aims to collect Real-World Evidence (RWE) from people living with myasthenia gravis (MG) in order to map the disease's natural history, its burden on patients and their families, its treatment, as well as its medical, social and pharmacoeconomic impact.
The purpose of this study is to obtain patient and stakeholder perspectives on what outcome measures should be included in future trials on CPPD (Calcium PyroPhosphate Deposition), a common form of inflammatory arthritis. This will form part of a wider OMERACT (Outcome Measures in Rheumatology) study, involving multiple international sites, to determine a core domain set (an agreed set of outcome measures) for this disease. In the UK, up to 10 patients with CPPD and their caregivers, healthcare professionals who care for patients with CPPD, and other stakeholders, which may include government organisations, non-government organisations, pharmaceutical representatives and health advocacy groups, will be invited to participate in a single, semi-structured interview. Interviews will be face-to-face or telephone, last up to one hour and digitally audio-recorded. For patients and their caregivers, interviews will explore their lived experience of CPPD, its impact on their daily lives, and the perceived relevance of outcome measures used in previous studies. For healthcare professionals and other stakeholders, interviews will explore their experience dealing with patients with CPPD, how they perceive CPPD impacts patient lives, and the perceived relevance of the outcome measures used in previous studies. Following analysis of the data, participants will be sent a short report with the researchers' findings, and asked to check the accuracy of these and provide brief written feedback. Interviews will also take place with patients, caregivers, healthcare practitioners and stakeholders at the other international sites where ethics committee approval will be sought locally. It is anticipated that around 30 participants will be recruited across all sites. Analysis of all interviews will be primarily conducted and managed at the UK site.
The primary objective of this study is to assess the effect of a single therapeutic (50 mg) oral dose of omecamtiv mecarbil (OM) on the QT interval / QT interval corrected for heart rate (QTc), relative to placebo, in healthy adults. The QT interval is the section on an electrocardiogram (ECG) that represents the time it takes for the electrical system to fire an impulse through the ventricles and then recharge, or the time it takes for the heart muscle to contract and then recover.
The LIBERATE intervention is a multi-component self-management, symptom monitoring and signposting website tailored to the supportive needs of women living with secondary breast cancer. Overall, this intervention aims to improve quality of life among this growing group of patients through targeted, tailored and accessible information and support. This randomised waiting list control trial aims to evaluate the feasibility of the clinically integrated LIBERATE intervention. Results of participants' online symptom monitoring questionnaires are integrated with their electronic patient record, enabling clinician review and follow up alongside participants' own self-management activities.