There are about 13332 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Netherlands. 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.
Excessive fat in the liver is associated with impairments in metabolic health. Reducing the amount of carbohydrates and fat both have been shown to reduce liver fat. However, not only the amount fats and carbohydrates, but also their quality have been shown to influence liver fat. Diets high in saturated fatty acids (SFA) and diets with a high glycemic index (GI) have been shown to increase liver fat content. However, available data from human dietary intervention studies is limited and these studies did not reflect a realistic diet. In the present study a combination of low GI/SFA on the one hand and high GI/SFA on the other hand is used to reflect realistically a healthy and an unhealthy diet as they are actually consumed by the Dutch population. The primary objective of this study is to investigate whether a two-week low compared to high GI/SFA diet reduces liver fat content. In addition, it will be investigated whether a two- week low compared to high GI/SFA diet reduces DNL, lowers the 24-hour glycemic response, lowers hepatic glycogen content, increases hepatic fat oxidation and changes hepatic lipid composition. Furthermore, the metabolic response to a meal (metabolites related to energy metabolism and substrate oxidation) will be studied upon the low and high GI/SFA diets.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of a 3-day intravenous (IV) fosaprepitant dimeglumine (MK-0517) regimen for the prevention of CINV in pediatric participants scheduled to receive emetogenic chemotherapy. Each participant was enrolled in Cycle 1 (on which the primary study objectives were based), consisting of the 3-day treatment cycle and 14 days of follow-up for a total of 17 days.
The goal of the study was to evaluate descriptively the effect of crizanlizumab + standard of care and standard of care alone on renal function in sickle cell disease patients ≥ 16 years with chronic kidney disease due to sickle cell nephropathy.
Phase 3 study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a benralizumab in patients with moderate to very severe COPD with a history of frequent COPD exacerbations and elevated peripheral blood eosinophils (≥300/μL). Eligible patients must have a history of ≥2 moderate and/or severe COPD exacerbations in the previous year despite receiving triple (ICS/LABA/LAMA) background therapy for at least 3 months and ICS-based dual inhaled treatment for the remainder of the year. Eligible patients must also have an elevated blood eosinophil count. The treatment period will be of variable duration and will continue until the last patient has the opportunity to complete a minimum of 56 weeks, at which point all patients will complete the study. The primary endpoint will be analyzed at Week 56.
The IMPACT Registry represents a non-interventional, prospective, open-label, multicenter, international registry with a follow-up of 5 years that includes data of patients undergoing aortic valve replacement with the Edwards INSPIRIS RESILIA Aortic Valve™. The IMPACT Registry will be performed in up to 25 participating sites across Germany, Austria and Switzerland. A minimum number of 500 patients (20 patients per center) will be enrolled. Patients will undergo follow-up visits at baseline, surgery, pre-discharge, year 1, year 3 and year 5.
Pectus excavatum is the most common anterior chest wall deformity that affects up to 1:400 of newborns. If an operative correction is indicated, patients are often operated via the Ravitsch or Nuss bar procedure. The latter (i.e. the Nuss bar procedure) is the most commonly performed procedure. During this procedure one or more metal bars are inserted behind the sternum to push the sternum back into its normal position. These bars remain in situ for two-to-three years before being removed. Despite the fact that the Nuss bar procedure is regarded as an effective procedure, retraction may occur after removal. A recent study has investigated this phenomenon, utilizing three-dimensional (3D) optical surface scans acquired before and after Nuss bar removal. The authors found statistically significant changes to occur in chest wall dimensions directly after, as well as between 2 and 8 weeks after Nuss bar explantation, in comparison to the situation just prior to bar removal. They, moreover, found the time the bar was in situ to be predictive for retraction. However, the authors also stressed that further studies are needed to reinforce their preliminary findings and perform long-term assessments. Subsequently, a similar study with long-term assessments will be conducted.
Invasively measured fractional flow reserve (FFR) has proven to be useful in guiding coronary revascularization. Several studies have shown that it is justified to treat lesions with a value of 0.80 or lower and safe to defer from PCI in lesions with a value of >0.80. Recently, computational fluid dynamics have allowed FFR measurement from coronary computed tomography angiography images (FFRCT) with excellent diagnostic accuracy compared to invasive FFR. FFRCT can also effectively guide revascularization safely deferring patient with FFRCT >0.80 from invasive angiography. In functionally non-significant lesions, computational fluid dynamic models in addition to CT plaque characteristics (low attenuation, positive remodelling, spotty calcification and napkin-ring sign) may be able to predict which lesions will become flow-limiting, causing clinical events in the future. This study will evaluate disease progression in intermediate lesions (invasive FFR 0.81-0.90 at baseline) using FFRCT at 2 years and determine whether CT characteristics may help to identify lesions that are more susceptible for FFR decline. Additionally, we will correlate CT characteristics with coronary events (a composite endpoint consisting of all-cause mortality, target-vessel myocardial infarction and clinically driven target-vessel revascularization) up to 5 years after the baseline invasive FFR.
The purpose of the study is to assess long-term safety and tolerability of weekly doses of rozanolixizumab in subjects with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP).
Sorafenib has proven efficacy in advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Most patients with HCC have impaired liver function due to underlying liver cirrhosis. The severity of liver cirrhosis might have implications on sorafenib metabolism. To date, no data showing unequivocal activity and tolerability of sorafenib in patients with moderate cirrhosis (Child-Pugh (CP)-B) have been published. To specifically address this issue, this study aims to explore population pharmacokinetics of sorafenib and to explore the relationship between sorafenib exposure and its efficacy and toxicity in CP-B patients with irresectable HCC.
The purpose of this study is to characterize the effect of repeated oral administration of TAK-788 160 milligram (mg) once daily on the single oral and intravenous dose pharmacokinetics (PK) of midazolam.