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.
The present RCT study investigates whether combined mindfulness program for children and their parents was beneficial for Italian children, aged 8-12, with disruptive behavior diagnosis (DBD). The study tests the program effects on children's behavioral difficulties in school and home contexts; children's and parents' mindfulness abilities; children's impulsiveness; and parents' stress. The study include a sample of 50 children randomly allocate to the intervention or to the control condition (wait-list control sample). Repeated measures of children's and parents' and teachers' reported measures will be used.
prospective randomized double-blind sham-controlled study aimed to investigate the effects of Repeated Muscle Vibration (rMV) on motor recovery in acute stroke patients, treated within 72 hours from symptoms onset
This study investigates the use of the Surprise Question [SQ] (would you be surprised if this patient were to die in the next 12 months?) in routine practice. In particular, the study will investigate the consistency of the responses to the SQ and the relationship with the subsequent course of action decided upon.
This is a Phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized-withdrawal study to assess the efficacy, safety and pharmacokinetics (PK) of relacorilant in patients with endogenous Cushing syndrome and concurrent type 2 diabetes mellitus/impaired glucose tolerance and/or uncontrolled hypertension
A first-in-human study using NJH395 in non-breast HER2-positive advanced malignancies
The study will include a safety run-in phase (Stage 1) and a randomization phase (Stage 2). The purpose of Stage 1 is to evaluate the safety of cobimetinib when administered in combination with niraparib (Cohort 1) and cobimetinib with niraparib plus atezolizumab (Cohort 2). Stage 1 will enable patient enrollment in the randomized phase of the study (Stage 2) with both regimens at the recommended dose levels from Stage 1. Stage 2 is a randomized, dose-expansion phase, evaluating clinical outcomes in patients with advanced platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer. All patients will continue to receive study treatment until disease progression (according to "Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors" (RECIST), Version 1.1, unacceptable toxicity, death, or patient or investigator decision to withdraw, whichever occurs first.
Study M15-722 is a Phase 2a study to investigate the efficacy and safety of Ravagalimab (ABBV-323) in participants with moderate to severe UC who failed prior therapy.
The main objective of the Phase 2 part of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of bemarituzumab (FPA144), a targeted antibody, in combination with modified FOLFOX6 compared to placebo in combination with modified FOLFOX6 in participants with advanced gastrointestinal cancer.
The study evaluates the effects of two different Colchicine doses (0.01mg/kg/day or 0.005 mg/kg/day) compared to placebo in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) patients. Disease progression as defined by changes in ALSFRS-r is the primary outcome measure. Other measures of clinical progression and survival, together with safety and tolerability of Colchicine in ALS patients will be assessed.
To compare the detection rate of biparametric (bp) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for clinically significant prostate cancer (PCa) with that of multiparametric (mp)-MRI, in biopsy-naïve patients. Today, bp-MRI is not the standard diagnostic procedure, however preliminary studies showed its non-inferiority with respect to mp-MRI. Its implementation on a wide scale could significantly reduce examination costs (no iv contrast agent and no endorectal coil), and study time. Secondary objectives will be: - to assess specificity of a blood test based on microRNA (miR) score in biopsy-naïve patients, using pathological assessment after MR-guided biopsy as reference standard. If specificity of the miR score is higher than that of PSA, then fewer patients will undergo unnecessary MRI, thus increasing the efficiency of the diagnostic pipeline for PCa; - to develop a clinical decision support system (CDSS) based on MRI and circulating miR evaluation, to stratify patients according to their risk of PCa progression, using pathological assessment after prostatectomy as reference standard. Patients will be stratified into two classes of risk: i) low-risk PCa, in which patients may benefit from a conservative approach (i.e. active surveillance), and ii) medium/high-risk PCa in which patients should undergo radical treatment (i.e. surgery or radiation therapy).