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NCT ID: NCT04617925 Recruiting - AL Amyloidosis Clinical Trials

A Study of Belantamab Mafodotin in Patients With Relapsed or Refractory AL Amyloidosis

EMN27
Start date: February 26, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is an open-label, multicenter, Phase 2 study in subjects with previously treated patients with light chain (AL) amyloidosis in need for therapy. Approximately 35 subjects will receive therapy with belantamab mafodotin. Subject participation will include a Screening Phase, a Treatment Phase, a Post-Treatment Observation Phase, and a Long-term Follow-up Phase. A safety run-in will be conducted in 6 subjects treated with belantamab mafodotin for at least 1 cycle. According to the two-stage statistical design of the study, an interim analysis of efficacy will occur. If after 15 patients have been enrolled at least 3 complete or very good partial responses have been recorded, the accrual will continue until all planned patients have been enrolled

NCT ID: NCT04617470 Recruiting - Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trials

Niraparib as Maintenance Treatment in Platinum Responsive Ovarian Cancer Patients: a Real Life Study

MITO 34
Start date: July 8, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is an observational phase IV study evaluating Niraparib as maintenance treatment in patients with platinum sensitive, platinum responsive, recurrent ovarian cancer in a real life setting.

NCT ID: NCT04616326 Recruiting - Chronic Migraine Clinical Trials

A Study of Galcanezumab (LY2951742) in Participants 12 to 17 Years of Age With Chronic Migraine

REBUILD-2
Start date: November 25, 2020
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of galcanezumab for the preventive treatment of chronic migraine in participants 12 to 17 years of age. The primary objective is to demonstrate the superiority of galcanezumab versus placebo in the reduction of monthly migraine headache days across the 3-month double-blind treatment period.

NCT ID: NCT04615975 Recruiting - Covid19 Clinical Trials

Ketogenic Diet as Protective Factor During COVID-19

Start date: November 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is posing a serious challenge to the health-care systems worldwide, with an enormous impact on health conditions and loss of lives. More than 30 millions of recoveries worldwide were registered at the end of October 2020 with more than 1 million of deaths. As the disease continues to spread, strategies aimed to reduce hospitalization time in sub intensive unit care, thus reducing pressure on health system, but also to reduce some of the pathological features of COVID-19 such as inflammation and the "cytokines storm". The ketogenic diet is a high fat, low carbohydrate, adequate-protein diet that promotes a physiological ketosis (due to an increase of liver ketone bodies production). High fat, low carbohydrate diets have been shown to reduce duration of ventilator support and partial pressure carbon dioxide in patients with acute respiratory failure. Moreover, the physiological increase in plasma levels of ketone bodies exerts important anti-inflammatory and immunomodulating effects, which may reveal as precious tools to reduce potential adverse outcomes of COVID-19 disease. The hypothesis of this study is that the administration of a ketogenic diet will improve gas exchange, reduce inflammation, and the duration of hospitalization. The plan is to enrol 28 patients with diagnosis of COVID-19 hospitalized but not in ICU with SPO2 higher than 88%.

NCT ID: NCT04615390 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Covid19_rehabilitation

Recovery Profiles in Patients With SARS-CoV-2 Outcomes Undergoing Rehabilitation

Start date: March 30, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

COVID19 patients survivors, after discharge from hospital show reduced lung function and reduced ability to exercise. Furthermore, mental health problems including stress, anxiety and depression and a low quality of life were observed. The prospective observational study involves COVID19 patients who have needed rehabilitation at the University Hospital of Ferrara. Patients receive comprehensive rehabilitation based on their specific needs in both acute and subacute rehabilitation. At the end of hospital rehabilitation, patients are offered a program to be carried out at home for both physical and psychological problems. A range of demographic and clinical data will be collected. Patients will also undergo a battery of functional, cognitive and psychological tests at 12, 26 and 52 weeks from the infection onset. Moreover, a specific assessement (both clinical and instrumental) on the pain symptom experienced, where present, will be done.

NCT ID: NCT04615234 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Major Depressive Disorder

Clinical Validation of a Combinatorial Pharmacogenomic Approach in Major Depressive Disorder

PANDORA
Start date: February 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a common, chronic, debilitating mood disorder causing serious functional impairment and significantly decreased quality of life. Pharmacotherapy represents the first-line treatment choice; however, only about one third of patients respond to the first trial because of antidepressants ineffectiveness or side-effects. This causes suffering for patients and their families and significantly contributes to pushing up costs for healthcare services. Precision medicine in psychiatry might offer to clinicians the possibility to tailor the treatment according to the best possible evidence of effectiveness and tolerability for each subject. In this context our study aims to carry out a clinical validation of a combinatorial pharmacogenomics (PGx) test in an Italian MDD patient cohort with an advocacy license independence. Our study is a prospective single-blind randomized controlled clinical observational trial enrolling 300 MDD patients. Patients referred to psychiatric services due to the failure and/or the onset of adverse effects of their current treatment for receiving a new antidepressant. Eligible participants with a primary diagnosis of MDD according to DSM-5 criteria and a Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D17) with a score > 14 are randomized to TGTG group (Treated with Genetic Test Guide) or TAU group (Treated as Usual). For all subjects, buccal brush for DNA is collected. The primary outcome is the reduction in depressive symptomatology as measured by HAM-D17. The secondary outcomes involve a range of scales that assess MDD symptoms and social functioning outcomes. The assessment is performed at four timepoints: baseline and 4, 8, and 12 weeks. This project represents the first randomized controlled clinical trial in which is tested whether a non-commercial PGx test improves outcomes in a MDD naturalistic cohort. Moreover, the identification of new genetic variants associated with non-response or side effects will improve the efficacy of the test leading to a further cost-saving.

NCT ID: NCT04615091 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Surgery--Complications

Non-invasive Methods and Surgical Risk Stratification in Cirrhotics Undergoing Elective Extrahepatic Surgery

Start date: August 30, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The ELASTO-SURGERY study aims to evaluate the prognostic role of portal hypertension evaluated by non-invasive methods in predicting post-operative morbidity (at 90 days) and mortality (at 365 days) in patients with advanced chronic liver disease undergoing elective extrahepatic surgery.

NCT ID: NCT04614415 Recruiting - Hypertrophic Scar Clinical Trials

Clinical Investigation to Evaluate the Performance of Hyaluronic Acid for the Treatment of Hypertrophic Scars

Start date: January 14, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study includes two study groups, one involves treatment with auto-cross-linked Hyaluronic acid by intralesional and hypodermic injection, repeated after two weeks (T14), while the control arm provides an equal treatment but with isotonic saline solution. Enrolled patients will be randomized into 2 groups with an allocation of 2:1 in study treatment arm and control arm respectively. They will be evaluated using the POSAS scale before the treatment and re-evaluated at 30, 90 and 180 days after treatment. The scar evaluation will be completed by an ultrasound assessment at time 0 (T0), 30 (T30), T90 and T180 and the DLQI (Dermatology Life Quality Index) to be assessed at time 0 (T0), 30 (T30), 90 (T90) and 180 (T180). In subjects that will consent, a small surgical biopsy for an explorative evaluation of the scar tissue will be performed before (T0) and after treatment (T30) for a histological assessment.

NCT ID: NCT04614012 Recruiting - Covid19 Clinical Trials

Hyperimmune Plasma for Patients With COVID-19

IMMUNO-COVID19
Start date: July 2, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), which originated in Wuhan, China, has become a major concern all over the world. Convalescent plasma or immunoglobulins have been used as a last resort to improve the survival rate of patients with SARS whose condition continued to deteriorate despite treatment with pulsed methylprednisolone. Moreover, several studies showed a shorter hospital stay and lower mortality in patients treated with convalescent plasma than those who were not treated with convalescent plasma. Evidence shows that convalescent plasma from patients who have recovered from viral infections can be used effectively as a treatment of patients with active disease. To date, no specific treatment has been proven to be effective. The investigators plan to treat critical Covid-19 patients with hyperimmune plasma.

NCT ID: NCT04613921 Recruiting - Liver Cirrhosis Clinical Trials

Liver Transplantation in Patients With CirrHosis and Severe Acute-on-Chronic Liver Failure: iNdications and outComEs

CHANCE
Start date: July 8, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Management of ACLF is mainly supportive. The poor outcomes lead physicians to consider liver transplantation as an option, even if controversial. In sicker recipients, LT results in immediate survival, but poor medium-term survival rates in some studies. The scarcity of deceased donors obliges to maximize LT success. Alternative strategies, as living-donor LT, should be explored. LDLT has impressive results in Eastern centers, but it is restrained in Western countries, due to potential life-threatening complications in the donor.