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.
The purpose of this study is to conduct a pilot feasibility study of external qigong on health-related quality of life in individuals with prolonged symptoms following COVID-19 infection.
Multicenter prospective single-arm trial of subjects with symptomatic Carpal Tunnel Syndrome treated with Ultrasound Guided Carpal Tunnel Release (CTR-US) in an office-based setting.
The purpose of this study is to test whether short, time-limited parent education programs designed to help children diagnosed with ADHD and disruptive behaviors can be helpful to families that may not be able to participate in "traditional" forms of mental health care. In short, the researchers want to know if a new program is acceptable and helpful for parents or caregivers looking for ways to help their child with problem behaviors related to ADHD. The researchers hope to enroll 60 families in the study. Half will be randomly assigned to participate in a 7-session therapy program and the other half will be asked to wait 24 weeks before being offered the treatment. Parents in the study will fill out questionnaires at week 1, week 14, and week 24. The researchers' goal is to answer 2 specific questions. 1) Is this protocol acceptable to families and do they choose to participate and 2) Are the researchers able to accurately measure our outcomes of interest, specifically, changes in children's behavior problems, changes in parenting practices, and parents' perceptions of mental health care. This study is focused on whether the intervention and study methods are acceptable. The researchers will compare the two groups to see if there are differences, but it would require a larger group of children and parents before the researchers can determine whether these differences are meaningful .
Primary Objective: 1. To describe the distribution of treatment regimens and objective response rate (ORR) in a Benchmark Cohort of real-world patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (RRMM) who initiate treatment after meeting the following criteria: (1) have either (a) at least three prior lines (3L) and are triple-class exposed (TCE), or (b) are triple-class refractory (TCR), and (2) meet similar inclusion/exclusion criteria to patients in phase 2 cohort 2 of the R5458-ONC-1826 (NCT03761108) trial. Secondary Objectives: 1. To describe additional outcomes (duration of response [DOR], progression-free survival [PFS], overall survival [OS], and time to next treatment [TTNT]) in the same Benchmark Cohort population described in the primary objective. 2. To describe distribution of treatment regimens, ORR, DOR, PFS, OS, and to compare ORR, PFS, OS, and TTNT in an Analysis Cohort consisting of real-world patients derived from the Benchmark Cohort described above who are weighted to align with the characteristics of patients in phase 2 cohort 2 of the R5458-ONC-1826 (NCT03761108) trial. Comparative analyses of PFS and OS will be performed conditional on sufficient maturity of survival data in the R5458-ONC-1826 (NCT03761108) trial at the time of analysis.
The purpose of this study is to develop a survey completed by parents, caregivers, or other informants that evaluates several important domains of functioning relevant to individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders, including autism spectrum disorder and people with genetic syndromes. Participation in this research will include assisting the research team in the development of the survey measures.
The goal of this study is to test KM-819 in halting or slowing the progression of Parkinson's disease. The study evaluates the safety and tolerability of multiple ascending doses of KM-819 in healthy older adults and participants with Parkinson's disease.
The purpose of this study is to further characterize basic pharmacokinetic (PK) parameters in healthy children to contribute to evidence for the safety of silver diamine fluoride (SDF; Advantage Arrest). Children with at least one active cavity will be treated and then have blood draws at random time points afterwards.
Evaluation of a novel self-collection device for cervical cancer screening.
Background: The COVID-19 global pandemic killed more than 6 million people worldwide. Several vaccines have been developed against the virus that causes this disease. These vaccines are effective at preventing severe symptoms and death from COVID-19. Some people with chronic liver disease, especially those with an advanced condition called cirrhosis, do not respond to many vaccines as well as healthy people do. The goal of this natural history study is to find out how well people with chronic liver disease respond to the COVID-19 vaccines. Objective: To learn how chronic liver disease affects the body s immune response to vaccination against COVID-19. Eligibility: People aged 18 years or older with chronic liver disease. They must also be enrolled in protocol 91-DK-0214 or 18-DK-0091. Design: Participants will have 3 visits, each spaced 6 months apart. Each visit will last 2 hours. Participants will have their vital signs recorded. These include age, sex, race, height, and weight. They will give their medical history. At each visit, participants will have blood drawn through a needle inserted into a vein in the arm. The sample drawn at each visit will be from 1 to 8 tablespoons. At each visit, participants will fill out a questionnaire. They will answer questions about whether they have been vaccinated against COVID-19; whether they have had COVID-19; and whether they have been exposed to someone who had COVID-19. The questionnaire will take 10 to 15 minutes. Researchers will also look at results of past blood tests from other research studies.
The study aims to compare and assess the dose response of 3 selected doses of AMG 133 compared with placebo, on inducing and maintaining weight loss from baseline at Week 52 in participants with overweight or obesity without diabetes mellitus (Cohort A) and in participants with overweight or obesity with Type 2 diabetes mellitus (Cohort B).