There are about 173942 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.
Surgical resection is the only potentially curative treatment for patients with pancreatic cancer. Patients with BRPC have tumors in close contact with the vasculature but not to the extent that resection is prohibited. Nonetheless, retrospective studies have shown that immediate resection in these patients is associated with an increased risk of positive margins, and a margin positive resection does not improve survival over that of patients with unresectable disease. Moreover, even in those patients where a successful resection is achieved, there is a high rate of early metastatic progression suggesting that micrometastatic disease is often present at diagnosis. Therefore neoadjuvant therapy is likely to improve outcomes in patients with BRPC to increase the likelihood of achieving a margin negative resection, provide early control of occult micrometastatic disease, and select those patients without systemic progression who would benefit from surgical resection.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and preliminary efficacy of preladenant (MK-3814A) alone and in combination with pembrolizumab (MK-3475) (pembro) in participants with advanced solid tumors that have not responded to prior therapy. This study will be done in 2 parts. Part 1 will identify and confirm the recommended Phase 2 dose (RP2D) of preladenant when given alone or in combination with pembrolizumab. Part 2 of the study will determine the safety and efficacy of preladenant in combination with pembrolizumab at the RP2D in participants with select solid tumors .
This study will examine the influence of stress and fasting on headache activity. Participants will receive both a control and stress session and be randomized to either fasting or not fasting for the visits.
The study aims to improve the care of the obstetric population after cesarean section and improve total patient satisfaction by improving post-surgical pain control with the use of dexamethasone in combination with bilateral TAP blocks. The investigators will utilize a dose-escalation of dexamethasone in the TAP block to observe its effects at specific small doses. It is the hope of the investigator that the studied technique would become utilized routinely for the obstetric population following cesarean section. The investigators hope to show that the addition of dexamethasone in bilateral TAP blocks will prolong the duration of the block in a dose-dependent fashion. The investigators hope to improve post-operative pain following cesarean section, increase duration of TAP block with use of dexamethasone, decrease overall pain scores in the first 24-48 hours, and decrease opioid requirements after cesarean section. The primary endpoint will be estimation of duration of TAP block, being assessed within 48 hours after surgery. Secondary endpoints will include pain scores both in PACU and on the floor, average pain scores, time until first opioid administration, total opioid consumption in first 48 hours, use of PONV medications, and overall patient satisfaction.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of utilizing a rapid turnaround CT/NG test on treatment of female patients in the emergency department or urgent care setting with possible STIs.
The primary objective of this study is to assess the utility of ultrasound guidance in the closed reduction of pediatric forearm fractures in the pediatric emergency department. The investigators will compare post-reduction radiologic outcomes between the experimental group (ultrasound guided closed forearm fracture reduction) and control group (standard of care blinded closed forearm fracture reduction) to determine if there is a difference in the number of adequate reductions between groups. Secondary objectives include comparing provider satisfaction with the reduction procedure, number of patients requiring repeat reductions, time for reduction, number of patients requiring operative repair after reduction, with the reduction procedure and comparison between post-reduction ultrasound and x-ray interpretation.
The purpose of this study is to examine the antipruritic efficacy of topical ketamine, amitriptyline, lidocaine, and a tri-combination of ketamine, amitriptyline and lidocaine (hereafter referred to as "KeAmLi") using non-histaminergic itch provocations in healthy volunteers. The primary outcome is itch reduction (AUC) between the vehicle and active treatment (KeAmLi-combo). Secondary outcomes include modality-specific analgesic properties of the topically applied ketamine, amitriptyline, lidocaine, and KeAmLi-combo to controlled quantitative thermal and mechanical stimuli, which can improve our understanding of the mechanism of action of these substances in the context of topical therapy.
To determine the feasibility of processes and instruments with an overarching purpose to guide the design of a larger study. To determine the feasibility of individuals with metastatic brain tumor(s) to engage in physical activity(PA) and cognitive rehabilitation (CR) as in an outpatient therapy setting.
IT141 is a novel nanoparticle formulation of SN-38, the active metabolite of irinotecan, and is intended to deliver more drug to the tumor with reduced toxicity on normal tissues. The study is designed to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of IT-141, and to investigate pharmacokinetic (PK) parameters and possible pharmacodynamics (PD) relationships. Patients will also be monitored for any response to therapy.
This study is being done to evaluate the safety of the investigational study drug, selinexor when given with docetaxel to patients who have been previously treated for advanced KRAS mutant lung cancer.