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.
This is a prospective, observational, naturalistic study conducted according to Italian law. The Investigators are interested in observing how often Evidence Based (EB) psychosocial and rehabilitative interventions are actually offered to patients in the real world clinical practice of psychiatric Italian services able to deliver this kind of treatments, focusing on a cohort of patients with recent onset schizophrenia, for whom delivery of integrated treatments is especially recommended, treated continuously with Long Acting Injection (LAI) antipsychotics. The primary objective of this study is to explore the level of implementation of EB psychosocial/rehabilitative treatments during a prospective 12-month period in patients with recent onset schizophrenia (≤ 5 years) being treated with a LAI Antipsychotic in Psychiatric Departments with expertise in the application of such interventions and to describe the reasons of implementing the particular EB psychosocial intervention and the clinical-functional characteristics of patients assigned to them. The prospective design is strictly required both for allowing consistent definition and application of such interventions and for describing reliably the characteristics of patients assigned to them. Secondary objectives are to describe the reasons for the choice of the specific assigned psychosocial intervention (if any) and the clinical and functional treatment outcomes of patients assigned or not-assigned to EB psychosocial therapies.The assignment of a patient to any particular treatment is not decided in advance by the study protocol, but falls within current clinical practice. Inclusion criteria are: - Patients with schizophrenia (F20 according to ICD-10 version 2013) - Onset of schizophrenia, defined as the first onset of symptoms that required specific antipsychotic treatment or hospitalization, as derived from anamnesis or available clinical documentation, not more than 5 years before study entry - Age between 18 and 40 years - Patients under treatment with a LAI on the basis of physician's decision (LAI started no longer than 6 months before study entry) and clinically stable (no relapse requiring hospitalization or change of treatment due to clinical worsening) during the last 1 month. Primary outcome of interest ("endpoint") is percentage of patients within the total study population who have been assigned to any EB psychosocial/rehabilitative treatment (listed below) for at least 1 month consecutively during the 12-month observation period (given the heterogeneity of interventions, this is an arbitrary duration which may reliably indicate a significant exposure to a given intervention). The percentage of each type of psychosocial intervention delivered together with frequency of sessions and length of treatment, and the reasons (categorized) given by the clinicians to justify the selected psychosocial intervention as well as the clinical-functional characteristics of patients assigned to them will be described. Patient assignment to the different interventions and their delivery will be traced in the patients' clinical charts. A list of key-words to describe each intervention will be provided in order to identify reliably and univocally the activities delivered. Secondary endpoints: - Sociodemographic information - Percentage of patients assigned during the 12-months period to at least one non EB intervention for at least 1 month consecutively (given the heterogeneity of interventions, this is an arbitrary duration which may reliably indicate a significant exposure to a given intervention) but not to any of the EB interventions. - Percentage of relapses - % of patients who discontinue drug treatment (for ineffectiveness, side effects or other reasons and patient/physician decision) and/or psychosocial interventions (for team or patient decision) - Changes in clinical, cognitive, functional and quality of life measures Additional endpoints: - Health economic information collected through 3 specific questionnaires: detection of i) health resources consumption for the care of the disorder (direct costs, eg. drug cost, hospitalization, emergency visits, Day hospitals, General Physician visits…) and assessment of indirect costs through evaluation of : ii) patient's potential income loss, absenteeism and presenteeism to estimate work productivity, daily activity impairment due to the mental illness and of iii) caregiver's potential income loss, commitment of time for the patient's care, absenteeism and presenteeism to estimate work productivity, daily activity impairment because of the patient's mental illness
Preterm infants (gestational age between 189 and 258 days) with a birth weight (BW) greater than 1250 grams will be randomized to personalized-parenteral nutrition (P-PN) or standardized-parenteral nutrition (S-PN). The aim of the study is to evaluate the effect of S-PN versus P-PN on growth of preterm infants with BW>1250 grams.
Non-invasive Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (nCPAP) is widely recognized as an efficient respiratory support in infants with mild to moderate Acute Hypoxemic Respiratory Failure (AHRF). Its application results in alveolar recruitment, inflation of collapsed alveoli, and reduction of intrapulmonary shunt. nCPAP is traditionally delivered with nasal prongs, nasal/facial mask. CPAP by helmet was introduced more recently in the clinical practice. The helmet circuit was described in details in previously published studies. From a physiological point of view the helmet circuit could be considered the best system to deliver CPAP because of the following: 1) it is characterized by the lowest amount of leaks around the interface and mouth opening 2) airways are free from potentially obstructing devices (cannula) thus the resistance is minimized and 3) theoretically the pressure is more stable minimizing the leaks 4) it is comfortable and usually sedation is not needed. High Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC) is increasing in use both in adults and pediatric population. HFNC could result in several clinical benefits by reducing inspiratory effort and work of breathing, increasing end-expiratory volume and CO2 wash-out for upper airways and creating a CPAP effects of 2-3 cmH2Oin the upper airways. This CPAP effect combined with an increase in CO2 wash-out and optimal airways humidification could decrease the respiratory work of breathing and improve gas exchange. However little is known about the optimal flow rate setting to improve the respiratory mechanics and gas exchange. Recent studies have reported that HFNC in nonintubated children improves oxygenation, reduces the respiratory drive and prevent reintubation in high patient risk. However all these physiological effects during HFNC therapy are only speculative. To address the question on the more efficient devices to support the child in the early phase of mild to moderate AHRF, the Authors designed a physiological randomized crossover study aimed at measuring the physiological effects of HFNC 2 and 3 l/Kg and helmet CPAP on the work of breathing (estimated by the esophageal Pressure Time Product, PTPes) in pediatric AHRF.
Primary Objectives: - To describe the characteristics of pediatric patients with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD) whose disease is not adequately controlled with topical therapies or when those therapies are not medically advisable. - To evaluate the time-course of AD and selected atopic comorbidities. Secondary Objectives: - To characterize disease burden and unmet need. - To describe real-world treatment patterns (eg, dosing regimens, treatment duration, and reasons for discontinuation and/or switching). - To document the real-world effectiveness and safety of treatments.
The purpose of this single-arm, open label, phase-II trial, is to determine whether the association of Midostaurin to standard induction, consolidation therapy and in maintenance therapy as single agent, is effective in decrease relapse incidence, in patients with CBF-AML. The single-arm, open label, phase-II study is based on data obtained from previous clinical and pre-clinical studies, obtained by use of Midostaurin in patients with Acute Myeloid Leukemia (with or without FLT3 mutations) and in patients with Mast cell disorders (characterized by mutations in the C-KIT gene). The investigators believe that Midostaurin, associated with standard therapy Anthracycline/AraC Induction, to the consolidation regimen with high doses of araC and maintenance therapy to single agent in patients with acute myeloid leukemia core-binding factor can significantly reduce the incidence of recurrence of the disease, occurring in 40-50% of cases treated with standard therapy
The use of epidural catheters for postoperative analgesia in pancreatic surgery is recommended by the guidelines of the ERAS society. Some studies claim it may expose to hemodynamic alterations that may compromise outcome and increase postoperative complications, attributable to a malfunction of the catheter itself, often linked to a bad positioning, since this is usually positioned with LOS technique. Our hypothesis is that a positioning made using the radiographic guide the day before the intervention can significantly reduce the number of catheter's dysfunctions.
This study will evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of the Port Delivery System with ranibizumab (PDS) (100 mg/mL) in patients with neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) who have either completed Phase II Study GX28228 (Ladder), Phase III Study GR40548 (Archway), Phase IIIb Study WR42221 (Velodrome), or completed Week 24 visit in Study WR42221 but were not eligible to be randomized in WR42221.
Neurological and neurodegenerative diseases have a major impact in families and in the national health service due to the lack in many cases of effective and long-lasting therapies. The lack of these therapeutic strategies is due in large part to the difficulty of modeling these pathologies in vitro. In fact, the impossibility of being able to cultivate human neurons in vitro has forced the use of animal cell models that do not adequately recapitulate the complexity of these human pathologies. For this reason it is necessary to proceed with the development of in vitro models of human origin that reproduce the molecular and biochemical characteristics of these diseases. The discovery of cellular reprogramming allowed the generation of pluripotent stem cells from the conversion of somatic cells taken from adult individuals. The proposing group already has great experience in generating iPS cells by reprogramming and in differentiating them into neurons and glias useful for neurological disease cellular studies. As an example, Dr. Broccoli's group has generated iPS cells from patients with Parkinson's disease and mutations in the OPA1 gene. The study of neurons differentiated by these iPS cells allowed to identify mitochondrial defects at the base of neuronal dysfunctions and to identify for the first time how the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons also depends on a moving mode of cell death called necroptosis. The investigators therefore propose to establish lines of iPS cells from patients with genetic mutations responsible for neurological and neurodegenerative diseases to generate neuronal and glial models in vitro for the study of pathological mechanisms and the validation of new future experimental therapies.
Patients undergoing PCI for ACS are exposed to a significant ischemic and bleeding risk. The aim of our study is instead to analyze in detail the rates of recurrent events, but also their predictors and impact on outcomes, in a population of unselected real life patients treated with PCI for ACS discharged on either Clopidogrel, Prasugrel or Ticagrelor who already experienced an adverse event during the first year of follow up.
Assess the degree of vascular involvement is crucial in the diagnostic and therapeutic work-up of pancreatic cancer. NCCN resectability classification is used to stratify patients (in resectable, borderline resectable and non resectable) and is based on contrast-enhanced CT scan images. Unfortunately evaluation of imaging tests may rely on some degree of subjective interpretation by observers implying a fundamental variation in patient's treatments and an irreproducibility of different center study results. This is a multicenter diagnostic study on interobserver agreement on the resectability of pancreatic cancer based upon NCCN criteria. The primary aim of the study will be the assessment of interobserver variability to define vascular invasion and resectability status on CT scans (according to the last version of the NCCN Classification). One hundred and thirty eight consecutive patients, able to produce an informed consent, from 18 years of age, with a non-metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma assessed by a contrast-enhanced high-quality CT scan will be enrolled. 69 CT scan studies provided by the centers involved (High volume for pancreatic surgery) will be randomly selected from a pool of 138 of the patients that meet the inclusion criteria. Each study will be independently reviewed by a senior radiologist and a senior surgeon of each center, blinded to patient's clinical history and CT scan report, using NCCN definition of respectability status. A CFR will be filled during the review and send to the study coordinator. The data will be than centrally analyzed to asses interobserver agreement The enrolment phase will last 6 months and the whole study will last 8 months.