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 phase 2, randomized study where the aim of the study is to investigate the tolerance of adjuvant chemotherapy, measured by functional decline, after surgery for colon cancer stage III in elderly patients. Secondary aims are disease-free survival, toxicity, late functional outcome, quality of life, to establish a geriatric assessment for selection of patients, and to examine the prognostic value of gene signature tests / biomarkers for stage III colon cancer.
To evaluate the safety and efficacy of the combination of an anti-PD-1 antibody (Spartalizumab (PDR001)), a BRAF inhibitor (dabrafenib) and a MEK inhibitor (trametinib) in unresectable or metastatic BRAF V600 mutant melanoma
This is a multicenter, open labeled, phase 2 clinical trial, where patients are stratified to one of two treatment groups based on upfront TP53 mutation status; i.e. TP53 mutated vs. TP53 wt disease, and treated with dose-dense cyclphosphamide. Furthermore, patients included are stratified based on tumor stage; i.e. locally advanced breast cancer (M0 disease) or metastatic breast cancer (M1 disease). All participating cancer centers will prospectively include patients with breast cancer fulfilling the inclusion criteria. If patients do not respond to the experimental treatment as outlined in the protocol, treatment with dose-dense cyclophosphamide will be terminated, and further cancer treatment will continue at the treating oncologist's discretion. The response data for all patients who have received at least one chemotherapy course will be included in the final efficacy analysis. Tumor tissue, blood samples and radiology data will be collected before therapy starts, if therapy needs to be changed, and for patients with locally advanced breast cancer: at surgery. Response data will be evaluated closely during treatment, with clinical assessment of tumor size every two weeks for patients with locally advanced breast cancer and by radiology every eight weeks for patients with metastatic breast cancer. Evaluation of side effects/tolerance will be performed at every clinical visit, i.e. every two weeks for all patients included in the p53 trial.
Total joint replacement is an efficacious treatment for osteoarthritis of hips and knees. Both total knee replacement (TKR) and total hip replacements (THR) have excellent implant survivorship. However, patient satisfaction is lower in TKR than THR. A possible cause of the discrepancy is the unnatural knee kinematics after TKR. Various implant designs have been developed to solve the problem. However, most of the designs are based on experimental data and not on in vivo kinematics. In this study, we will analyze the in vivo kinematics of the Global Medacta Knee Sphere (GMK Sphere) implant and compare it with a well documented design and implant (NexGen Cruciate Retaining (CR), Zimmer Biomet). We assume our study will contribute to the development of more satisfying knee implants.
The aim for the study is to examined the effect of an individually tailored integrated behavioral medicine in physiotherapy intervention including functional exercise, for older adults, having chronic musculoskeletal pain, living alone and dependent on formal care. The study is a pragmatic randomized controlled trial with one intervention group and one control group. The intervention is a 12-weeks home-based program. The intervention consists of an individually tailored intervention and aims to enhance ability to perform everyday activities by improving physical function and reduce pain-related beliefs and pain-related disability. The comparison group achieves general advice about physical activity. All participants will be tested at baseline, a post-assessment at 12 week and a three month follow-up. Primary outcome is pain interference by the Brief Pain Inventory and physical function by Short Physical Performance Battery. Secondary outcomes measures if the goal setting is reached, self-efficacy in relation to the goal setting, pain catastrophizing, level of physical Activity, falls efficacy and Health related quality of life.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a condition where the patient's breathing cease during sleep due to collapse of the oro-pharynx. The consequences are reduced quality of sleep, increased risk for developing cardiovascular disease and increased risk of accidents caused by daytime sleepiness. Among Norwegians 30-65 yrs, the prevalence of OSA are estimated to 16%. The golden standard in OSA-treatment is Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP). This is effective and must be used for life. However, CPAP-treatment might be uncomfortable for the patient, with poor compliance as a result. An alternative is Mandibular Advancing Splints (MAS), which is perceived as less troublesome and may initiate higher compliance. Through mapping of patient characteristics, the researchers investigate which patient-type benefits most from two different treatment-devices. The aim of the study is to assess how the MAS treatment differ from the CPAP treatment in respect to efficacy, compliance and impact on health related quality of life among patient diagnosed with mild/moderate OSA. All OSA patients referred to the Ear- Nose- Throat-department (ENT) at University Hospital, Northern-Norway (UNN) and St.Olavs Hospital were invited to participate in the study. The sample size at completion of the study should be 140 patients. Participants in the trial were randomly allocated to the two treatment groups, and assessed after 4 and 12 months of treatment. Data were collected through anamnesis, clinical examination, clinical photos, radiographs and questionnaires concerning general health related quality of life (SF36), oral health, cognitive aspects (HADS), sleep quality (PSQI), daytime sleepiness (Epworth's Sleepiness scale) and compliance.
Study aims to support development of evidence based health care in Norway through evaluating recently proposed technological improvements in cervical cancer control before their routine use. SESAM II study evaluates the accuracy of vaginal self-sampling for high risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) testing compared with a physician-taken sample.
The purpose of the project is to compare the management of 3 and 4 part proximal humerus fractures (PHF) with an angular stable plate (Philos) with that of an intramedullary nail (Multiloc) in light of complications, radiological, economical, functional and clinical outcome.
The purpose with this study is to test the effect of an app for stress management among patients with a variety of cancer diagnoses.
A controlled randomized, open-label, multi-centre study evaluating if an immunosuppressive protocol, based on ATG-induction, once daily tacrolimus-dose (Advagraf®), mycophenolate mofetil and corticosteroid reduces the incidence of chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD) after lung transplantation, in comparison with a standard cyclosporin-based protocol.