There are about 5161 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Norway. 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 single arm, open-label, multi-center, phase II study to determine the efficacy and safety of tisagenlecleucel in de novo HR pediatric and young adult B-ALL patients who received first-line treatment and are EOC MRD positive. The study will have the following sequential phases: screening, pre-treatment, treatment & follow-up, and survival. After tisagenlecleucel infusion, patient will have assessments performed more frequently in the first month and then at Day 29, then every 3 months for the first year, every 6 months for the second year, then yearly until the end of the study. Efficacy and safety will be assessed at study visits and as clinically indicated throughout the study. The study is expected to end in approximately 8 years after first patient first treatment (FPFT). A post-study long term follow-up safety will continue under a separate protocol per health authority guidelines.
The study aims to estimate the effect of atorvastatin on muscular symptom intensity in coronary patients with subjective statin-associated muscle symptoms (SAMS) and to determine the association with blood levels of atorvastatin and its metabolites, to obtain an objective marker for true SAMS. A randomized study will include 80 coronary patients with SAMS during ongoing atorvastatin therapy or previous muscle symptoms that led to discontinuation of atorvastatin. Patients will be randomized to 7-weeks treatment with atorvastatin 40 mg/day in the first period and matched placebo in the second 7-weeks period, or placebo in the first period and atorvastatin in the second period. A control group (n=40) without muscle symptoms will have 7 weeks open treatment with atorvastatin 40 mg/day. Blood samples will be collected at baseline and after each treatment period, and muscular symptom intensities will be rated by the patients weekly. The primary outcome is the difference in aggregated mean Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) scores between the last three weeks of atorvastatin treatment and of placebo treatment. The main purpose is to develop an objective marker for true SAMS, by comparing SAMS associated with blinded atorvastatin treatment with blood concentrations of atorvastatin and its metabolites. Diagnostic and discrimination performance will be determined. The study provides new clinical knowledge on SAMS in coronary patients and may contribute to more personalized statin treatment and monitoring, fewer side-effects and consequently improved adherence and lipid management in future practice.
The trial will evaluate whether human papillomavirus (HPV) self-sampling may increase cervical cancer screening attendance among under-screened women in Norway, how different ways of offering self-sampling and follow-up may affect attendance, and whether self-sampling may reduce inequities in attendance.
Musculoskeletal disorders are the main causes for sickness absence and disability benefits in Norway and the leading causes of disability worldwide. There is strong evidence that long-term sickness absence due to musculoskeletal disorders provides a poor prognosis, both in terms of work-related disability, physical and mental health, and health related quality-of-life. To assist people return to work a range of vocational rehabilitation programs exist, but the initiatives have not been able to reduce the number of people who are on sick leave due to musculoskeletal disorders. In Norway, The Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration (NAV) case-workers have taken such approaches in use, primarily by teaching their employees with user contact in how to use Motivational Interviewing (MI). However, the evidence on the effectiveness of MI on return to work is highly uncertain. The objectives of this project are to compare the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of usual case management alone with usual case management plus MI or usual case management plus stratified vocational advice intervention (SVAI), on RTW among people on sick leave due to musculoskeletal (MSK) disorders. All musculoskeletal diagnoses will be included. A multi-arm randomised controlled trial with 150 participants in each group will be conducted within the NAV system in Norway to evaluate these research questions.
This is a follow-up survey of women, 10-12 years after they were included in the population-based Stork Groruddalen study of pregnant women, primarily set up to study gestational diabetes and related health issues in pregnancy in a multiethnic population. The investigators will now update the information about the health status of these women to study the development of risk factors for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases.
This study will develop and evaluate a complex intervention to implement guidelines on family involvement for patients with psychotic disorders (F20-29 in International Classification of Diseases ICD-10) in community mental health centres, by using a cluster randomised design. Fifteen Norwegian outpatient units participate in the study, and each of them constitutes a single cluster, except for two collaborating clinics who are considered one cluster. Of the fourteen clusters, half will receive implementation support and training immediately, whereas the other half will receive it one and a half year later. The study will assess both service level outcomes, by measuring fidelity scores, and selected outcomes for patients and relatives, by collecting questionnaires and data from central health registers and patient records. In addition, qualitative interviews will be performed with patients, relatives and health care personnel. The study will also include a cost-effectiveness analysis and a political economy analysis.
This is a Phase II open, randomized, active comparator-controlled multi center study in patients with severe type-1 diabetes. This is a two-armed study where patients are randomized in a 2:1 ratio between IBsolvMIR and heparin. Eighteen patients are planned to be included. The study consists of up to 8 visits; screening, transplantation surgery with bolus administration of study drug or active comparator, IBsolvMIR doses on day 1, 3 and 6 after surgery, follow up visits on day 7 and 14, and follow-up phone call on day 44. The primary endpoint is to study AEs up to 44 days following study drug administration. The secondary endpoints are to evaluate changes in TAT, C-peptide, C3a and HGF at baseline and during the first 24 hours after study drug administration, as well as evaluate a change in levels of C-peptide-glucose-creatinine ratio on day 14 compared to baseline.
This study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of pembrolizumab (MK-3475) versus placebo as adjuvant therapy in participants with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and complete radiological response after surgical resection or local ablation. The primary hypotheses of this study are that adjuvant pembrolizumab is superior to placebo with respect to: 1) recurrence-free survival (RFS) as assessed by blinded independent central review (BICR); and 2) overall survival (OS).
Rostock International Parkinson's Disease Study - An International, multicenter, epidemiological observational study aiming at identification of LRRK2-positive patients, the recruitment of 25,000 PD participants and the establishment of a candidate biomarker in the LRRK2-positive cohort.
In this trial the investigators want to examine if there is any difference in hemodynamic stability when giving equipotent prophylactic injections of ephedrine 0,1 mg/kg, phenylephrine 1 microg/kg, norepinephrine 0,1 microg/kg or sodium chloride (NaCl) 9 mg/ml during induction of general anesthesia with propofol and remifentanil.