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NCT ID: NCT04293575 Recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Transcatheter Mitral Valve Repair as Bridge Therapy to Heart Transplantation

MitraBridge
Start date: June 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The aim of this study is to report medium-term outcomes after the use of transcatheter mitral valve repair (TMVR) with MitraClip as a bridge therapy to heart transplantation (HTx) in patients with mitral regurgitation (MR) and end-stage heart failure (HF).

NCT ID: NCT04293159 Recruiting - Parkinson Disease Clinical Trials

Effect of Probiotic on Constipation in Patients With Parkinson's Disease

Start date: May 14, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the study is to collect data for the assessment of the Lactobacillus casei DG (Enterolactis ®duo) effect on constipation and on neuropsychological performance

NCT ID: NCT04291612 Recruiting - Endometrial Cancer Clinical Trials

Observational Study of Women With Endometrial Cancer Who Receive the Standard Treatment for Their Disease

Start date: February 26, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study is being done to find out how often endometrial cancer recurs after the standard treatment as well as how often the standard treatment results in a lymphedema.

NCT ID: NCT04291287 Recruiting - Atrial Fibrillation Clinical Trials

Triple or Dual Antithrombotic Therapy After PCI (TRIDUAL-PCI) Coronary Intervention in Patients With Non-valvular Atrial Fibrillation. Real-world Italian Multicenter Registry (TRIDUAL-PCI)

TRIDUAL-PCI
Start date: January 25, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Aim of this study is to describe clinical and procedural characteristics of real-world population initiated on triple antithrombotic therapy (double antiplatelet therapy+anticoagulant) or double antithrombotic therapy (single antiplatelet therapy+anticoagulant) after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Investigator's driven trial, retrospective (2015-2019), multicenter Italian registry. Baseline clinical characteristics as well as procedural details will be collected retrospectively. Follow-up data (minimum 6 months and maximum 5 years follow-up) will focus on combined rates of stent thrombosis and myocardial infarction (primary endpoint).

NCT ID: NCT04290299 Recruiting - Endometrial Cancer Clinical Trials

Endometrial Cancer Conservative Treatment (E.C.Co). A Multicentre Archive

Start date: September 15, 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Approximately one fourth of cases of endometrial cancer (EC) are diagnosed in premenopausal women, of whom approximately 40% wish to preserve their fertility. When arising in young women, EC usually presents with favorable prognostic features, as a focal, well differentiated endometrioid tumor, with minimal or absent myometrial invasion. This profile corresponds to the Type 1 EC, which correlates with the estrogen/progesterone receptor positive (ER+/PR+) pattern. On the other hand, these patients frequently present with clinical signs of a hyperestrogenism (chronic anovulation, infertility, obesity). Primary progestin therapy has been demonstrated to be effective in early well differentiated tumors and in poor operative candidates with response rates ranging from 58-100%.Currently, the therapeutic approach to an early stage EC consists of a staging laparotomy/laparoscopy, including a total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (TAH-BSO), peritoneal washings, and lymphadenectomy (pelvic and aortic), depending on the pathological risk profile pre- and intraoperatively determined. Therefore, the current standard of surgical approach is preclusive of fertility. The worldwide experience and data on conservative management of EC are, however, still limited. Most of reports based on cases retrospectively collected, harboring potential methodological bias, using different treatments and drugs, and with insufficient follow-up. Some systematic reviews have been published in the last decade, trying to summarize the literature data. Therapeutic results seem to be promising with a regression rate of approximately 75% and relapse occurring in 25-40% of cases, with anecdotical reports of deaths of disease (DOD). The fertility outcome was, however, not satisfying with about 30% pregnancy rate in patients attempting to conceive, and an overall low rate of assisted reproductive techniques (ART) despite the subfertile clinical profile.Therefore, there is a need for a prospective, multicentre cooperative project able to systematically collect data from consecutive patients treated according to defined (not necessarily identical) protocols, concerning the oncological, as well as, the obstetrical outcomes. Moreover, this project could represent the "template" in which a pretreatment fertility counseling, psychological support, and definitive surgery are routinely included according to shared criteria.

NCT ID: NCT04289805 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Breast Neoplasm Malignant Female

Controlled Ovarian Stimulation in Newly Diagnosed Breast Cancer PatiEnts (fAMHOPE)

fAMHOPE
Start date: February 25, 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This is a multicenter hospital-based prospective cohort study conducted in institutions with known expertise in performing oocytes/embryo freezing for fertility preservation. The study aims at refining the understanding of the efficacy and safety of controlled ovarian stimulation with or without letrozole in young women with newly diagnosed breast cancer who are candidates to receive (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy.

NCT ID: NCT04288310 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Hepatitis B, Chronic

A Study of JNJ 73763989+JNJ 56136379+Nucleos(t)Ide Analog (NA) Regimen Compared to NA Alone in e Antigen Negative Virologically Suppressed Participants With Chronic Hepatitis B Virus Infection

Start date: November 6, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of 48-week study intervention with JNJ-73763989+JNJ-56136379+nucleos(t)ide analog (NA) regimen compared to NA alone assessed by HBsAg levels. This study is part of HepB Wings Platform Trial (PLATFORMPAHPB2001).

NCT ID: NCT04287530 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Dyslexia, Developmental

Poly-unsaturated Fatty Acids and Developmental Dyslexia

Start date: May 2, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Poly-unsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) represent a component of lipids that covers a relevant role in human diet and biological functions such as provision of energy, functionality of cell membranes and tissue metabolism. Fatty acids carbon chains can be saturated (with no presence of double bonds) or unsaturated (with one or more double bonds). PUFAs fall into the unsaturated group, and they can be divided into two classes: omega-3 (n-3) and omega-6 (n-6) fatty acids (FAs). PUFAs are relevant components of cellular membranes, phospholipids, and precursors of eicosanoids, which influence neuronal development and functioning, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and arachidonic acid (AA) in fact are involved in cell growth, neural signaling, and gene expression. The main natural dietary source for Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and DHA is fish oil. It has also been shown how the Magnocellular system, which includes the retinal ganglion cells, the lateral geniculate nucleus (for the visual system, while the medial geniculate nucleus would be involved for the auditory system) of the thalamus, the posterior parietal cortex, various areas visual of the cortex and part of the cerebellum, is sensitive to the contribution of fatty acids through nutrition. A deficit related to the Magnocellular system, specialized in the processing of stimuli with high temporal frequencies and low spatial frequencies, in both the visual and auditory modalities, has been proposed as one of the causes of Developmental Dyslexia (DD). According to this hypothesis, an alteration at the magnocellular level would affect reading by hampering temporal processing of the visual signal and would reduce the quality of the phonological representations due to imperfect acoustic analysis of the incoming phonemes. It is therefore possible to hypothesize that supplementation of PUFA in dyslexic children would improve the functions of the M-system and thus create better conditions to the remediation of reading difficulties, especially through remediation programs specifically tapping visual attention and rapid processing of visual stimuli. The remediation program currently used at Scientific Institute (IRCCS) Medea, "Tachidino", based on tachistoscopic, hemisphere-specific stimulation and on training of selective visual-spatial attention, has exactly these characteristics. Hence, the present study aims to test the efficacy of PUFA supplementation before and during treatment with Tachidino.

NCT ID: NCT04286438 Recruiting - Hemorrhage Clinical Trials

Bentracimab in Ticagrelor-treated Patients With Uncontrolled Bleeding or Requiring Urgent Surgery or Invasive Procedure

REVERSE-IT
Start date: March 30, 2020
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This is a multi-center, open-label, prospective single-arm study of reversal of the antiplatelet effects of ticagrelor with bentracimab (PB2452) in patients who present with uncontrolled major or life-threatening bleeding or who require urgent surgery or invasive procedure. At least 200 patients will be enrolled from approximately 200 centers in North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific regions, including mainland China. Patients with reported use of ticagrelor within the prior 3 days who require urgent ticagrelor reversal will be eligible for enrollment. These populations will be enrolled based on separate inclusion criteria.

NCT ID: NCT04283864 Recruiting - Crohn Disease Clinical Trials

Decoding Personalized Nutritional, Microbiome and Host Patterns Impacting Clinical and Prognostic Features in Crohn's Disease

Start date: November 29, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The study is 3 arms observational study with no intervention that aims to understand the link between Crohn's disease, microbiome and diet in children. 150 children newly diagnosed with Crohn's disease will participate in the study and their data will be used to create an algorithm about their microbiome, disease, diet, etc. 100 other children newly diagnosed will participate in the study and their data will be use to validate the algorithm. The investigators will be recruiting 50 healthy participants: 20 that are undergoing an endoscopy for abdominal pain and 30 that comes to the physician for different reasons. After parental consent, the participants will receive an explanation of the study and sign a consent form for colonoscopy. Before colonoscopy, participants will bring fecal samples, give blood samples, biopsies and biopsy brushes (superficial scraping of the tissue) will be taken during the operation. These samples will be retained until further consent is obtained for further study. After receiving the results of the colonoscopy, children who have been diagnosed with Crohn's disease will be offered to participate in the second part of the study, they will receive an explanation about the app, collection of fecal samples at home, diet logs and anthropometric measurements, demographic information, medical and family history will be registered. During the first 3 months: the participants will be asked to log data in the app and collect fecal samples at home. They will be asked to come for a follow up visit where anthropomorphic measurements and blood samples will be taken. Participants will be asked to log in every day to report in the app daily activity and food intake throughout the study period. Each week, the research coordinator will call on participants to make sure the app is correctly filled in, collect the stool samples correctly and answer questions. During the entire study participants will collect fecal samples, every first week of the month participants will enter information in the app. For children who have not been diagnosed with Crohn's disease by the colonoscopy, or children who visit the institute for reasons other than inflammatory bowel disease without a clear finding will participate in the study control group. If consent is given, fecal samples will be collected at the entrance of the study and after one year, blood samples, a food questionnaire and anthropometric indices, demographic information, medical and family history will be completed.