There are about 173016 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in United States. 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.
Expanded access tothe GORE® EXCLUDER® Thoracoabdominal Branch Endoprosthesis is safe and effective in the treatment of thoracoabdominal and pararenal aneurysms.
This is an open label expanded access program for male and female patients 2 years or older, to provide continued desensitization treatment with DBV712 250 mcg.
The primary objective of the intermediate expanded access protocol is to provide access to the investigational product, CNM-Au8, to up to 300 people living with ALS (pALS). No formal clinical hypotheses are being evaluated with concurrent controls. Secondary objectives include assessment of the safety of CNM-Au8 treatment in pALS. Safety will be assessed through the frequency of serious adverse events (SAEs), treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) assessed as 'severe', discontinuations due to TEAEs, and laboratory abnormalities assessed as clinically significant during routine clinical monitoring (as applicable).
The overall goal of this expanded access program is to provide Venetoclax and Navitoclax to patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) or lymphoblastic lymphoma (LL) who have exhausted standard treatments.
This Expanded Access Protocol will provide access to the IMP ExoFlo for patients who have severe or life-threatening abdominal solid organ transplant rejection or who are evaluated and determined to be at high risk of progression to severe or life-threatening condition related to rejection of an abdominal solid organ transplant, at risk of worsening allograft function, or at risk of complications from current immunosuppressive therapeutic regimens.
Continued access to treatment for subjects who continue benefit from therapy with gedatolisib in combination with palbociclib, and fulvestrant or letrozole.
This expanded access program is an open-label, single-arm design where consenting patients may participate up until APT-1011 is commercially available in the relevant regions or the protocol is terminated by the Sponsor.
The researchers are doing this study to provide access to treatment with 131I-omburtamab for children and young adults who have CNS/leptomeningeal neoplasms. 131I-omburtamab is an investigational drug; the FDA has not approved it to treat this cancer or any other disease. However, the agency has granted the drug Breakthrough Therapy Designation for the treatment of neuroblastoma with CNS metastases.
To allow the use of domperidone by patients with gastrointestinal disorders who have failed standard therapy.
The compassionate use programme will give participants concizumab for free, even though it is not yet approved by health authorities. This is because participants need this medicine to treat their haemophilia properly. The programme will check that participants are safe and that the medicine works for them. The programme may last for years. Participants will take one injection under their skin every day. Participants will have 4-5 visits with the study doctor for the first half year. After that they will have 1 visit every half year. At all clinic visits participants will have blood samples taken. Participants will fill in a diary between the visits. A patient is considered to have completed the programme when any of the following criteria occurred first: 1) when the patient is included in a clinical trial with concizumab or 2) up to 6 months after concizumab is commercially available in the patient's country and approved for the patient (The time span of 6 months should provide ample time for the patient to obtain concizumab commercially) or 3) the sponsor decides to discontinue concizumab clinical development for the patient's population.