Clinical Trials Logo

Filter by:
NCT ID: NCT04304001 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Colorectal Cancer Screening

Test Up Now Education Program

TUNE-UP
Start date: April 7, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will test the effectiveness of an outreach strategy to increase colorectal cancer (CRC) screening in African Americans. The investigators will recruit 250 African Americans ages 45-64 years who are not up-to-date with CRC screening or have never been screened, with the goal to evaluate screening knowledge, behavior, and intervention effects on CRC screening outcomes. Participants will be randomly assigned to the TUNE-UP intervention or a control group. The TUNE-UP intervention arm will utilize a community health advisor (CHA) to encourage return of stool blood testing kits through cell phone outreach. The control group will receive educational materials about CRC screening plus a resource list but no CHA counseling support or cellphone / text contact. The primary study outcome is receipt of CRC screening (colonoscopy or FIT) following the intervention. The secondary outcomes will include CRC screening knowledge, self-efficacy (confidence to receive CRC screening), intention to screen, and follow-up in the case of an abnormal test result. The research objective is to test the CHA intervention effectiveness for promoting stool blood testing as a preferred screening test in an under-screened African American population.

NCT ID: NCT04303780 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for KRAS p, G12c Mutated /Advanced Metastatic NSCLC

Study to Compare AMG 510 "Proposed INN Sotorasib" With Docetaxel in Non Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) (CodeBreak 200).

Start date: June 4, 2020
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

A Phase 3 Study to Compare AMG 510 with Docetaxel in Non Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) subjects with KRAS p. G12c mutation

NCT ID: NCT04303169 Active, not recruiting - Melanoma Clinical Trials

Substudy 02C: Safety and Efficacy of Pembrolizumab in Combination With Investigational Agents or Pembrolizumab Alone in Participants With Stage III Melanoma Who Are Candidates for Neoadjuvant Therapy (MK-3475-02C/KEYMAKER-U02)

Start date: June 26, 2020
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Substudy 02C is part of a larger research study that is testing experimental treatments for melanoma, a type of skin cancer. The larger study is the umbrella study. The goal of substudy 02C is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of investigational treatment arms in participants with Stage III melanoma who are candidates for neoadjuvant therapy to identify the investigational agent(s) that, when used in combination, are superior to the current treatment options/historical control available. Arm 1: Pembrolizumab + Vibostolimab, Arm 2: Pembrolizumab + Gebasaxturev, and Arm 3: Pembrolizumab were added in the base protocol on 13-Nov-2019, and enrollment into those arms has been completed. Arm 4: Pembrolizumab + MK-4830 was added in Amendment 04 on 20-Dec-2021, and enrollment into that arm has been completed. Arm 5: Favezelimab + Pembrolizumab and Arm 6: Pembrolizumab + all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) were added in Amendment 06 on 25-Jun-2022, and enrollment is ongoing.

NCT ID: NCT04302740 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Alcohol Use, Unspecified

Life Enhancing Alcohol-management Program

LEAP
Start date: February 21, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

People experiencing chronic homelessness comprise a small yet high-morbidity, high-cost subset of the larger homeless population and are disproportionately impacted by alcohol-related harm. Unfortunately, traditional abstinence-based treatment does not adequately reach or engage this population, and both firsthand (problems stemming from one's own alcohol use) and secondhand (problems stemming from others' alcohol use) alcohol-related harm persists even after housing attainment. There have therefore been calls for more flexible and client-centered approaches tailored to this population's needs. Housing First, which entails the provision of immediate, permanent, low-barrier, nonabstinence-based housing, is a response to this call. Research has shown that Housing First is associated with decreased alcohol use, alcohol-related harm, and publicly funded service utilization. Nonetheless, Housing First residents continue to experience both first- and secondhand alcohol-related harm. Thus, further community-based interventions are necessary. To this end, a pilot project was conducted in which researchers as well as Housing First residents, staff and management codeveloped, implemented, and initially evaluated the Life Enhancing Alcohol-management Program (LEAP). The LEAP entails low-barrier, community-level, house-wide resident programming-including leadership opportunities, activities, and pathways to recovery. At the 6-month follow up, LEAP participants reported significantly more engagement in meaningful activities than control participants (p < .001). Moreover, high levels of LEAP program engagement (>2 activities per month) predicted significant reductions in alcohol use and alcohol-related harm (ps < .01). To build on these promising findings, we propose a larger, cluster-randomized controlled trial of LEAP (N=160) as an innovative, community-based, and client-driven adjunct to Housing First. Analyses will test LEAP effectiveness in increasing engagement in meaningful activities, decreasing alcohol use, ameliorating both first- and secondhand alcohol-related harm, and improving quality of life. Engagement in meaningful activities will also be tested as a mediator of the LEAP effect on alcohol and quality-of-life outcomes. Finally, we will assess whether LEAP is associated with reduced costs stemming from participants' use of emergency health-care and criminal justice services.

NCT ID: NCT04302727 Active, not recruiting - Weight Loss Clinical Trials

Delicious Eating for Life in Southern Homes

DELISH
Start date: July 6, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will compare a new weight loss program that focuses on a healthy eating pattern, with WW™ (formally Weight Watchers), an effective and widely available weight loss program. Study researchers have developed an adapted version of the Mediterranean eating pattern to be more acceptable and realistic for southerners; this adapted version is known as "Med-South." Those who take part in the study will be randomly assigned to either the Med-South weight loss program or WW™. Both programs will last for 2 years with measurement visits at the start of the study and at 4-, 12- and 24-month follow-up. While the primary outcome measured by the trial will be weight loss at 24 months, researchers will collect other data which may show additional health benefits of the Med-South diet. The study team will measure blood markers of inflammation, which are known to improve with better diet quality. Researchers will also measure participants' skin carotenoid levels, which increase with greater fruit and vegetable consumption. The study will be conducted within 2 regional catchment areas (n=360 participants) representing a diverse spectrum of patients and settings. Patients with a BMI ≥ 30 kg/m^2 will be enrolled and randomized to intervention or augmented usual care. To assure adequate subgroup representation, ≥ 40% of the sample will have diabetes, ≥ 40% will be male, and ≥ 40% will be African American. The intervention will be delivered in 3 phases over 24 months by research staff: Phase I (4 months) focuses on adopting a Med-style dietary pattern; Phase II (8 months) on weight loss; and Phase III (12 months) on weight loss maintenance. Outcomes will be assessed at 4, 12, and 24 months. The primary outcome is weight loss at 24 months. Secondary outcomes include change in physiologic, behavioral, and psychosocial measures. Researchers will also assess implementation cost and the incremental cost-effectiveness of the intervention relative to the augmented usual care group.

NCT ID: NCT04302389 Active, not recruiting - Weight Loss Clinical Trials

Single Arm Trial of a Multi-component Commercial Digital Weight Loss Program

Start date: February 10, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of the proposed research project is to evaluate the acceptability and efficacy of an online multicomponent commercial weight loss program and to understand the relationship between program engagement and weight loss and health outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT04302207 Active, not recruiting - Bronchiolitis Clinical Trials

The ROUTT-B (Reduce Over-Utilized Tests and Treatments in Bronchiolitis) Study

ROUTT-B
Start date: September 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Over-testing and over-treatment costs the US healthcare system hundreds of billions of dollars a year, and has measurable negative impacts on patients' physical, emotional, and financial health making it a significant public health concern. The proposed research will advance "de-implementation" science by identifying processes and strategies to stop or reduce over-testing and over-treatment that can be broadly adapted to varied contexts and disease processes to improve the delivery of guideline concordant, evidence-based care and improve patient outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT04301622 Active, not recruiting - Knee Osteoarthritis Clinical Trials

Post Market Clinical Follow-Up Study for EVOLUTION® BIOFOAM® Tibia and EVOLUTION® CS/CR Porous Femur

Start date: February 3, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

MicroPort (MPO) is conducting this PMCF study to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of its EVOLUTION® BIOFOAM® Tibia and EVOLUTION® Cruciate Sacrificing/Cruciate Retaining (CS/CR) Porous Femur components, including EVOLUTION® CS tibial inserts. This type of study is required by regulatory authorities for all devices that have been approved in Europe to evaluate the medium and long-term clinical evidence.

NCT ID: NCT04301518 Active, not recruiting - Preterm Birth Clinical Trials

Prematurity Risk Assessment Combined With Clinical Interventions for Improving Neonatal outcoMEs

PRIME
Start date: November 6, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This prospective, randomized, controlled study evaluates the safety and efficacy of a preterm birth (PTB) prevention strategy versus standard of care pregnancy management to reduce the incidence of adverse pregnancy outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT04301414 Active, not recruiting - Prostate Cancer Clinical Trials

Non-fucosylated Anti-CTLA-4 (BMS-986218) + Degarelix Acetate vs. Degarelix Acetate Alone in Men With High-risk Localized Prostate Cancer

Neo-Red-P
Start date: February 25, 2020
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to see whether immunotherapy with BMS-986218 added to degarelix (which suppresses testosterone) given prior to surgery can decrease the chance that cancer will come back compared to degarelix alone. People who usually have this type of prostate cancer usually do not receive any additional therapy prior to surgery. Approximately 24 individuals will be asked to participate in this study.