Clinical Trials Logo

Filter by:
NCT ID: NCT06073327 Completed - Dyslipidemias Clinical Trials

Short-term Cocoa Supplementation and Elite Soccer Players

COCOA
Start date: May 3, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this interventional study was to investigate the impact of daily ingestion of 30g of dark chocolate on omega-3 fatty acid status and gut microbial community in professional soccer players. The main questions it aims to answer are: Can 30g of dark chocolate positively influence the metabolism of polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFAs) and, particularly, arachidonic acid (AA): eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) ratio? Can 30g of dark chocolate change the microbial composition in professional soccer players? Elite male soccer players were randomly divided into 2 groups. One group was provided with 30g of dark chocolate 88% (2,5 mg/g of polyphenol) and one group, as control, was provided with with 30g of white chocolate (0 mg/g of polyphenol). Each group ingested the chocolate intervention as a "solid bar" in the morning (before 9:00 am) every day for 4 weeks. The dark chocolate and white chocolate were provided every morning to each subject by the nutritionist of each team, while, during off days, the chocolate was portioned into individual serving sizes and provided to each player. Adherence was checked by the nutritionist. For each assessment, the participants arrived at the training center in the morning, after an overnight fast. Before the beginning and the end of the study, a 3-days food record (3dr) was recorded (2 weekdays and 1 week-end day) by the nutritionist. Blood was collected between 08:00 and 09:00 hours, fecal sample was delivered within the end of the morning, and anthropometry measures were determined.

NCT ID: NCT06073288 Not yet recruiting - Crohn Disease Clinical Trials

Unveiling the Microbial Impact on Intestinal Fibrosis

Start date: November 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Crohn's disease (CD), belonging to the class of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, is a chronic inflammatory disorder that may affect any location of the gastrointestinal tract. It is characterized by transmural inflammation and an overwhelming immune response of the gut mucosa, which leads to severe clinical symptoms. More than 50% of CD patients develop a penetrating or stricturing disease due to fibrostenosis, which most of the time requires surgical intervention since no therapies have been found as effective yet. Among the histological features of stricturing CD, the thickening of the muscularis mucosae and muscularis propria is the main hallmark, primarily due to the excessive proliferation of mesenchymal cells and the increased accumulation of a collagen-rich extracellular matrix in the submucosa, caused by multiple mechanisms, including i) the proliferation of existing local fibroblasts, the induction of both ii) epithelial-to-, and iii) endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition. Even if the alteration of these mucosal functions is mainly caused by the continuous tissue injury occurring during CD-associated chronic inflammation, recent reports suggested that CD associated fibrosis may be driven by inflammation-independent triggers, such as microbiota dysbiosis. Shedding the light on this aspect of CD fibrosis may lead to the development of innovative therapeutic strategies eventually blocking the gut thickening.

NCT ID: NCT06073132 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Generalized Epidermolysis Bullosa Simplex

An International, Multicenter, Randomized, Double-Blind, Parallel Group, Vehicle-Controlled, Phase 2/3 Study With Open-Label Extension Evaluating the Efficacy and Safety of Diacerein 1% Ointment for the Treatment of Generalized Epidermolysis Bullosa Simplex (EBS)

Start date: April 4, 2024
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The proposed Phase 2/3 trial with double-blind and open-label extension phases is an international, multicenter study designed to assess the efficacy and safety of diacerein 1% ointment in patients with generalized EBS.

NCT ID: NCT06072742 Completed - Inflammation Clinical Trials

Effect of Lifestyle on Caries and Apical Periodontitis

Start date: September 20, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

This study aimed to link lifestyle factors (Mediterranean diet adherence, stress, sleep quality, physical activity) to caries and apical periodontitis in 149 university-based individuals. Data included clinical and radiographic assessments and lifestyle questionnaires. Statistical tests and logistic regression were employed to analyze the relationships between these factors and oral health conditions.

NCT ID: NCT06072404 Completed - Clinical trials for MEDICATION RELATED OSTEONECROSIS OF THE JAW

OZONE_EXO: Comparative Analysis of Protocols for Dental Exactions in Patients at Risk of MRONJ: Case-control Study

OZONE_EXO
Start date: February 1, 2018
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ) is a serious adverse reaction of antiresorptive and antiangiogenic agents; it is also a potentially painful and debilitating condition. Today, no specific studies have prospectively evaluated the efficacy of its treatment and no robust standard of care has been established. Among non-invasive procedures to treat MRONJ, the use of medical ozone (O3) arises for its properties and has been deployed and evaluated. O3 has generally proven to play a role in the treatment of chronic, nonhealing, or ischemic wounds, due to its antimicrobial and anti-oxidant properties and to bio-stimulation; it has been extensively used for different medical approaches and purposes. In oral cavity, local applications are carried out by ozonized water (i.e. spray or compress) or gel. The aim of this study was to carry out a case-control study in order to compare two different protocols of dental extractions in patients at risk of MRONJ, with and without infiltration of a mixture of oxygen-ozone. All the cases in our study are cancer and oncologic and osteometabolic patients undergoing high-risk therapy for MRONJ (antiresorptive and antiangiogenic drugs) who require dental extractions with a poor prognosis. During the first examination (T0), medical, pharmacological, and dental history of patients are recorded. Data collected are: (1) age; (2) gender; (3) indications for use, type, cumulative dose and duration of MRONJ-related drugs; (4); history of chemotherapy; (5) other medications; (6) other diseases; (7) smoking. For each patient, an orthopantomography and a cone beam computed tomography of the teeth are performed only if indicated.

NCT ID: NCT06071819 Completed - Clinical trials for Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Clinical Markers of Panic and Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Start date: August 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this observational study is to compare socio-demographic and clinical features in patients affected by Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) and by Panic Disorder (PD). The main questions it aims to answer are: - which socio-demographic/clinical markers are associated to GAD or PD diagnosis? - which factors are associated with a longer duration of untreated illness (DUI) in GAD and in PD? Participants will signed a written informed consent and socio-demographic/clinical variables will be retrospectively collected. Researchers will compare GAD and PD groups in terms of socio-demographic and clinical features, including DUI, to better characterize the two disorders and to investigate factors associated to a longer DUI.

NCT ID: NCT06071611 Completed - Cognitive Frailty Clinical Trials

Cognitive Frailty and Oxygen-ozone Therapy

Start date: July 2, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

As the world's population age, frailty is moving to the forefront of health and medical research and may become one of the world's most serious health issues. Understanding frailty prevention and treatment becomes even more crucial in order to reduce national healthcare costs. Oxygen-Ozone (O2-O3) therapy is a no-invasive/no-pharmacological and low cost procedure based on the therapeutic effects of low O3 concentrations, already used in medicine as an alternative/adjuvant treatment for different diseases and in the elderly. This project is the first pilot double blind randomized controlled trial where a group of elderly frail subjects are stratified as untreated (air), treated with pure O2 and treated with a mixture of O2-O3. The biological corollary will be transcriptomics, proteomics and also cognitive impairment assessment at baseline and after treatment. An algorithm combining these data will identify biomarkers of the response to O2-O3 therapy.

NCT ID: NCT06071598 Recruiting - Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trials

The Role of Lipid Transporter MFSD2A in the Resolution of Colorectal Cancer-associated Inflammation

Start date: March 15, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The intrinsic connection between inflammation and tumor promotion is well characterized and is a key pathogenic event in patients with colorectal cancer (CRC), the second most common cause of tumor-related death in western countries. Environmental factors and chronic inflammation represent the major causes of intestinal carcinogenesis. In fact, patients suffering from inflammatory bowel diseases, including Crohn's disease and Ulcerative Colitis (UC), have high risk of developing colitis-associated CRC with poor prognoses. Therefore, targeting the cancer-associated inflammation may offer new avenues for cancer treatment. In fact, several anti-inflammatory drugs, have been used for prophylaxis and have shown efficacy in contrasting cancer, despite various adverse side effects. Thus, there is an urgent need to discover novel cancer-associated mechanisms to develop alternative therapies that may reduce aberrant inflammatory responses without interfering with physiological defenses against infection and functional anti-tumor immunity. A novel approach promoting anti-tumor immunity has been recently proposed after the discovery of potent, endogenous, specialized pro-resolving mediators (SPMs), including lipoxins, resolvins, protectins, and maresins, mainly derived from omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) via COX, LOX and CYP450 pathways, mediated by MFSD2A. Due to the potent bioactivity of SPMs in resolving inflammation and because of the correlation between inflammation and cancer, the roles of these lipid mediators have attracted great attention for their potential therapeutic role in cancer treatment, including CRC. Nevertheless, the understanding of the endogenous mechanisms that limit the inflammatory response during CRC development is incomplete and requires further investigation. Based on the preliminary results indicating that dysfunctional MFSD2A-dependent pro-resolving pathways may foster CRC development, the investigators aim to define the functional role of MFSD2A in orchestrating pro-resolving pathways in the intestinal endothelium of metastatic and not metastatic CRC patients. This is a cross-sectional single-center observational study involving patients with CRC. The investigators will enroll 15 patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) stratified by tumor stage (T0 / T1-T4, M0 / M1, N0 / N1 / N2) undergoing surgery in the Gastroenterology and Digestive Endoscopy unit within Gastro Center (IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele). Human Intestinal Microvascular Endothelial Cells (HIMEC) will be generated from each sample of cancer surgical specimens, while the healthy cells will be derived from the healthy margins of the colorectal resection of the same CRC patients. MFSD2A will be overexpressed or silenced and the investigators will evaluate its biological effects in both tumor-derived HIMECs and healthy tissue-derived HIMECs through transcriptomics and lipidomics analysis. The investigators will also exploit a possible novel therapy based on the delivery of MFSD2A encoding plasmid-conjugated liposomes.

NCT ID: NCT06071585 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Eosinophilic Esophagitis

Monocentric Retrospective Observational Study for Validation of Meta-analysis of the Metatrascryptome and Transcriptome of Eosynophyl Esophagitis

Start date: November 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a retrospective monocentric observational study involving patients with Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), and controls (patients without EoE and GERD). To validate the EoE-related markers obtained with the EoE TaMMA web app (such as CCL26, TBX5, NOX4, FGF7, CXCL14, ADAMTS5, PDGFRA, CXCL12, ACVRL1, POSTN, and LTBP4), we will stain and analyze EoE, GERD, and controls Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue samples already stored in the pathological laboratory of OSR. For this reason, this project will be accomplished thanks to the collaboration with prof. Doglioni's team at OSR.

NCT ID: NCT06071572 Recruiting - IBD Clinical Trials

San Raffaele IBD Biobank

Start date: January 18, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The developments of knowledge and possibilities of investigation in the biomedical field, and in particularly in the field of inflammatory bowel diseases need to be analyzed and study vast cases of biological material carefully collected, preserved and correlated with complete clinical-pathological-instrumental data. In order to organize and make uniform the collection, storage and management of samples and the clinical data associated with them, a biobank is being set up, called "IBD Biobank" aimed at studying inflammatory intestinal diseases. THE subjects/patients who decide to authorize the collection, storage and use of biological material for future research purposes which are not currently identifiable will be called, in this document, donors. The IBD Biobank involves the recruitment of adult subjects. To each donor will be given informed consent DSAN 1178/6 ("Regulation e informed consent for the collection, conservation and use of human biological material spontaneous monocentric or multicentric studies with promoting OSR") or the most updated version of this informed consent, according to the directives of the OSR Ethics Committee. The biological material of the IBD Biobank will be processed at the laboratories of the Biological Resources Center (CRB) e preserved at BIOREP srl (Via Olgettina, 60, c/o San Raffaele Hospital-DIBIT2 - Palazzina San Michele 20132 Milan). Generally biological materials will be collected during the already scheduled surgery and the routine clinical examination as part of outpatient visits, day hospitals and hospital admissions. The biological samples will come stored in tubes equipped with barcode identification (2D) which guarantee a code unique to each rate and preserve its anonymity. The clinical-pathological-instrumental data, demographic and anamnestic information will be entered by trained personnel on a computerized database anonymously by assigning a UPN code identifying the patient. Access the database is managed via personal login and password. All data entered is recorded and stored on the server of the IRCCS San Raffaele Hospital in Milan.