There are about 21062 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Italy. 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.
LUCENT is an observational study focused on malignant pulmonary and tracheo-bronchial disease. It involves a large proportion of reference Italian thoracic surgery centers. The relevance of the study is related to the epidemiology of lung cancer in the world - also known as "Big Killer" - and the high mortality rates both in males and females. The aim of his prospective study is to collect a large bulk of postoperative patients' outcome data and to produce up-to-date descriptive statistics of patients undergoing surgery for lung cancer. These results will be pivotal to compare the clinical results of all the relevant specialities involved in the care of lung cancer such as medical oncologists and radiation oncologists.
The goal of this prospective study is to validate a high resolution manometry score to predict pathologic GERD in patients with reflux symptoms. The main question it aims to answer is: Is it possible to predict GERD on high resolution manometry? Participants will be asked to undergo high resolution manometry and pH-study
Thyroid carcinoma (TC) is the most common endocrine malignancy, affecting 0.2-1.5% of individuals worldwide. The rising incidence rate of TC is mostly related to the expanding use of high-quality imaging techniques, with an increase in the detection of thyroid nodules. Fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) is the most accurate, rapid, safe, and cost-effective test for the evaluation of thyroid nodules, with high specificity and sensitivity. Nevertheless, FNAC is particularly unreliable in differentiating between benign and malignant nodules that fall under the category of indeterminate thyroid nodules (class III and class IV according to Bethesda Classification[2]). In fact, in these cases, the expected malignancy rates are 5-15% and 15-30%, respectively. Thus, most patients with indeterminate thyroid nodules undergo an operation that is indeed unnecessary, while representing a risk for surgical complications and a cost for health-care systems. We aim to evaluate different approaches to indeterminate nodules across different countries in the world.
This an interventional, non-pharmacologic study. Prehabilitation is a multidisciplinary preoperative intervention aimed at preventing or reducing functional decline related to surgery and improving perioperative outcomes. The current study is aimed at standardizing a prehabilitation pathway, evaluating its feasibility within the AUSL Romagna in collaboration with the PRIME Centre and the multiple professions that populate the two institutes in the spirit of confirming the beneficial effect of an integrated prehabilitation programme on surgical outcomes. Patients will follow an intensive prehabilitation course before surgery: - Colon cancer patients will do 4 weeks of prehabilitation before surgery. - Rectal cancer patients will do 12 weeks of prehabilitation after neoadjuvant therapy and before surgery. The prehabilitation course is structured around the following aspects: - Frailty assessment and identification of optimisation fields - Optimisation of modifiable factors (anaemia, polypharmacotherapy, smoking, alcoholism, diabetes) - Assessment by an integrative medicine specialist - Nutritional pre-qualification - Cardiovascular, respiratory, motor prehabilitation - Emotional and psychological prehabilitation
This observational retrospective study aims to learn about the incidence of acute kidney (AKI) injury in newborns in infants exposed to nephrotoxic drugs with a big data approach. The main question it aims to answer are: - Develop a model that can predict the occurrence of AKI in infants admitted to the NICU; - Identify the drug or combination of drugs associated with an increased risk of AKI. The group of infants exposed to drugs will be defined based on exposure for at least 1-day tone one or more therapies commonly used in the NICU. Once the AKI event has occurred, the observation of the trend of daily creatinine and diuresis values will be continued for the period covered by the study.
The Prospective Cardiac Ultrasound Imaging Study is a single center, single arm, feasibility study. The study aims at collecting cardiac ultrasound data from patients diagnosed with ventricular tachycardia, during rest and short breath hold sequences. This study is part of the engineering studies linked to the CardioKit-Minimum Viable Product project. The CardioKit prototype used in the study can monitor cyclical heart-beat motion, cyclical respiratory motion and non-cyclical heart position changes while the patient is lying in supine position.
Researchers are looking for a better way to treat people who have macular edema secondary to retinal vein occlusion (RVO). In people with RVO, a blood vessel that carries blood away from the retina (vein) becomes blocked. The retina is the very back part of the eye. The blocked vein causes fluid and blood to leak into the retina and thereby causes a swelling of the macula (the center of the retina responsible for fine vision). This swelling is called macular edema. When a vein in the retina is blocked, the levels of a protein called vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) rises. VEGF helps the growth of new blood vessels. This can lead to macular edema and may cause the vision to become blurry. The study treatment intravitreal (IVT) aflibercept is given as an injection into the eye. It works by blocking VEGF and this can help repair vision problems related to RVO. IVT aflibercept is already available and is prescribed by doctors as the standard of care treatment for macula edema secondary to RVO. Standard of care is a treatment that medical experts consider most appropriate for a disease. Standard of care is given every 4 weeks in people with macula edema secondary to RVO. While repeated injections of aflibercept may prevent worsening of vision, it may place a burden on the patient. However, a higher amount (8 mg) compared to the standard of care (2 mg) of IVT aflibercept is being tested in studies. This higher amount could be given less often. The amount of IVT aflibercept given is measured in milligrams, also known as mg. The main purpose of this study is to learn how well a higher amount of the study treatment aflibercept works in people with macular edema secondary to RVO. To answer this, researchers will measure changes in vision called best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) in the study participants between study start and after 36 weeks of treatment. Changes will then be compared between those participants who received the higher amount of IVT aflibercept and those that received standard of care. To learn how safe the study treatment is in the participants, the researchers will count the number of participants from study start and up to 64 weeks later that have: - adverse events - serious adverse events "Adverse events" are any medical problems that the participants have during a study. Doctors keep track of all adverse events that happen in studies, even if they do not think they might be related to the study treatments. An adverse event is considered "serious" when it leads to death, puts the participants' lives at risk, requires hospitalization, causes disability, causes a baby being born with medical problems or is otherwise medically important. Dependent on the treatment group, the participants will either receive the higher amount of aflibercept or standard of care as an intravitreal injection for up to 60 weeks. The study will consist of a test (screening) phase, a treatment phase and an end of study phase. Each participant will be in the study for up to 64 weeks. One visit to the study site is planned during the screening phase, followed by visits approximately every 4 weeks (16 in total) during treatment and one visit at the end of the study. During the study, the study doctors and their team will: - check patients' eye health using various eye examination techniques - measure patients' eye vision (BCVA) - take blood and urine samples - do physical examinations - check vital signs - examine heart health using electrocardiogram (ECG) - do pregnancy tests in women of childbearing age In addition, participants will be asked to fill a questionnaire on vision-related quality of life.
Atrial Fibrillation (AFib) is the most common cardiac arrhythmia, causing the loss of the normal and coordinated atrial contractility. Several studies have demonstrated the existence of some atrial anatomical sites involved in the initiation and maintenance of this arrhythmia, first of all the posterior wall in the area around the outlet of the pulmonary veins. In fact, the existence of a complex of structural and functional modifications has been documented, collectively defined as "structural remodeling" which involve both the cardiomyocyte and the interstitium (the space between the cardiomyocytes) from a histopathological point of view; at the cardiomyocyte level, a loss of sarcomeres in the perinuclear site (myocytolysis), a reduction in the expression of "adult" cellular proteins (e.g. cardiotin and titin) with concomitant re-expression of "fetal" proteins (e.g. muscle actin smooth), as well as a modification of the mitochondrial structure. At the interstitial level, remodeling is characterized by the deposition of fibrous tissue in the interstitium between the muscle bundles and by a reduction in capillary density. Regarding the deposition of collagen fibers, some studies on an experimental model of AFib have shown that the latter is not reversible. Autophagy is an intracellular process regulated by numerous biochemical signals; it is present at basal levels in most tissues and allows the physiological turnover of the various structural components of the cell, directing them to lysosomal degradation. It can also be stimulated by external signals in unfavorable environmental conditions, such as in the case of pathologies that determine a condition of tissue oxidative stress protracted over time. Experimentally, an excessive activation of the latter has been associated with the early stages of pathological cardiac remodeling in various animal models of cardiovascular diseases and some recent studies have hypothesized that altered levels of autophagy may contribute to the possible mechanisms involved in the generation and maintenance of the remodeling cardiomyocyte and interstitial structure in AFib. The levels of autophagic activity can be evaluated by studying specific markers - such as the Beclin-1 and LC3B proteins - constituents of the autophagic signaling cascade. In the case of LC3B, the "LC3BII/LC3BI" ratio (the processed form of autophagosomal vesicles and the unprocessed form constitutively present at the cytoplasmic level) was used as an autophagy biomarker. Furthermore, some microRNAs (miRNAs) capable of controlling the expression of proteins of the autophagic cascade have been described in the literature. This is the case of miRNA 30a and miRNA 204, respectively, which respectively inhibit the expression of Beclin-1 and of LC3B. This study aims to investigate from a histo-morphological and molecular point of view the presence of alterations of autophagy mechanisms in patients with persistent or permanent AFib and which correlate these modifications with the degree of structural remodeling present at the level of the left atrial myocardium.
Septal myectomy is performed in selected cases to treat patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM). The mechanism that causes obstruction involves both the outflow tract itself and the mitral apparatus, with the appearance of mitral regurgitation (MR) by SAM (Systolic Anterior Motion). When the interventricular septum is not particularly thick, isolated myectomy may not be sufficient to eliminate the SAM; in these cases the concomitant treatment of the mitral valve is considered. Different approaches have been proposed: mitral replacement with prosthesis, plication or lengthening of the anterior leaflet or the edge-to-edge (EE) technique. In addition, a small proportion of patients with HOCM may have MR from organic valve abnormalities, requiring specific treatment. Currently, there are few studies in the literature aimed at determining the role of EE in the context of HOCM; most of these studies are characterized by short follow-up or by the scarcity of echocardiographic data. The aim of the present study is to evaluate the long-term outcomes of EE associated with septal myectomy in patients with CMIO, both from a clinical point of view and by reporting echocardiographic data.
This is a Phase 2 study in adult participants with moderate to severe hidradenitis suppurativa (HS). The purpose of the study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of SAR442970 compared to placebo.