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NCT ID: NCT03135990 Terminated - Clinical trials for Social Anxiety Disorder

Using Virtual Reality in Exposure-Based Treatment for Social Anxiety in Youth

Start date: August 14, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Anxiety disorders are the most common mental health diagnosis in the US and are associated with avoidance that causes functional impairments and decreases quality of life. Social anxiety disorder is among the most prevalent anxiety disorders, with most common age of onset being in adolescence. The frontline treatment for social anxiety disorder is cognitive behavioral therapy with exposure. However, a significant number of adolescent patients do not get better after completing cognitive behavioral therapy or experience relapse. This could be explained by findings in both mice and humans suggesting that cue-based extinction learning occurs less readily in adolescents than in children and adults. Studies using mouse-models have overcome this age disparity by enhancing contextual cues when fear extinction learning takes place. Providing realistic learning contexts for exposure could be the key to enhancing treatment effects in adolescents. This is often challenging for a variety of reasons, including difficulty realistically mimicking anxiety-provoking social situations due to limited resources, clinician training, time, or motivation. Virtual reality environments could provide contextual exposures for social anxiety. This pilot study will test the feasibility of integrating virtual reality technology in exposure-based treatment in youth ages 13-23 diagnosed with social anxiety disorder with the goal of approximating equivalent efficacy with traditional cognitive behavioral therapy, and assessing feasibility of virtual reality technology with this population. We will also pilot a fear conditioning and extinction learning paradigm to explore the relationship between extinction learning and efficacy of virtual reality exposure therapy, using physiological assessment indicators to mark changes in fear response. These markers will also be used prior to the initiation of the therapy to assess the degree to which virtual reality environments invoke a true fear response, comparing the 12 participants with social phobia to 12 age matched, non-anxious control participants. The aims of this study are threefold: to assess feasibility of using virtual reality in treatment of social anxiety in youth, to examine whether virtual reality invokes arousal similar to anxiety and test the physiological assessment protocol, and to evaluate whether exposure using virtual reality environments reduces symptoms of social anxiety and related functional impairment.

NCT ID: NCT03134989 Terminated - Clinical trials for Hearing Impairment, Sensorineural

Cochlear Response Telemetry and Hearing Preservation

CREST
Start date: December 22, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Interventional

The main purpose of this study is to monitor the response from the cochlea as the electrode is inserted during the operation to receive a cochlear implant. The Cochlear Response Telemetry tool aims to measure the response from the cells within the cochlea and may be useful in the future to help to improve the surgical technique and potentially help surgeons better preserve any natural hearing that is available. The measurements are obtained using the cochlear implant and sound processor while a sound is presented to the ear through an earphone (like an earplug) placed into the ear canal.

NCT ID: NCT03132428 Terminated - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Hypertension of Newborn

Registry to Evaluate INOmax in Newborn Babies With Pulmonary Hypertension

PaTTerN
Start date: July 27, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Pulmonary hypertension is high blood pressure in the arteries to the lungs. It is a serious condition. It causes the blood vessels that carry blood from the heart to the lungs to become hard and narrow. When this happens, the heart has to work harder to pump the blood through. Some babies are born with pulmonary hypertension (PH). Doctors might use INOmax (a gas the baby breathes) to help newborn babies (neonates) with PH. This study will use information from the records of registered babies to see how effective and safe INOmax is for treating premature and other newborn babies for up to 11 days after they are born.

NCT ID: NCT03131206 Terminated - Clinical trials for RET-positive Non-small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)

A Study of Alectinib in RET-rearranged Non-small Cell Lung Cancer or RET-mutated Thyroid Cancer

Start date: June 19, 2017
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This research trial is studying a drug called alectinib as a possible treatment for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with specific genetic alterations known as ALK or RET rearrangements, and thyroid cancer with RET rearrangements.

NCT ID: NCT03128086 Terminated - Clinical trials for Neurological Diseases or Conditions

Weaning From Mechanical Ventilation in Neurological Patients

Start date: September 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

After a period of mechanical ventilation, a spontaneous breathing trial is performed before extubation in order to assess the patient's ability to breathe. In neurological patients a spontaneous breathing trial can not predict the success of extubation. The extubation failure is associated with a longer intensive care unit stay and hospital stay, as well as more infections and higher mortality. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that the use of a protocol-directed weaning in neurological patients reduces the rate of extubation failure and associated complications.

NCT ID: NCT03126760 Terminated - Clinical trials for Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting

Acthar Gel for Multiple Sclerosis That Keeps Getting Better and Worse (RRMS)

OPTIONS
Start date: May 22, 2017
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This study will enroll about 66 participants who experienced a relapse of RRMS that steroids did not help. The doctor will put participants into a treatment group. Each person has an equal chance of being in either one of two groups (like flipping a coin). One group will receive a shot of study medicine (called Acthar Gel) under their skin every day for 14 days. The other group will receive a shot every day for 14 days, too, but there is no medicine in it (called placebo).

NCT ID: NCT03123588 Terminated - Clinical trials for MPN (Myeloproliferative Neoplasms)

Phase 2 Study of Ruxolitinib Versus Anagrelide in Subjects With Essential Thrombocythemia Who Are Resistant to or Intolerant of Hydroxyurea (RESET-272)

Start date: November 14, 2017
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of ruxolitinib versus anagrelide in subjects with essential thrombocythemia who are resistant to or intolerant of hydroxyurea.

NCT ID: NCT03123055 Terminated - Clinical trials for Urinary Bladder Disease

A Study of B-701 in Combination With Pembrolizumab in Treatment of Locally Advanced or Metastatic Urothelial Cell Carcinoma

FIERCE-22
Start date: April 20, 2017
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a Phase 1b/2 multi-center, open-label study to establish the initial safety and to determine a recommended Phase 2 dose of B-701 in combination with pembrolizumab, and to determine safety, tolerability and efficacy of B-701 (vofatamab) plus pembrolizumab in the treatment of subjects with locally advanced or metastatic UCC, who have progressed following platinum-based chemotherapy and who have not received prior immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy.

NCT ID: NCT03122548 Terminated - Clinical trials for Gastric Adenocarcinoma

Safety and Efficacy of CRS-207 With Pembrolizumab in Gastric, Gastroesophageal Junction or Esophageal Cancers

Start date: August 14, 2017
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether CRS-207 in combination with pembrolizumab is safe and effective in adults with recurrent or metastatic gastric, gastroesophageal junction, or esophageal cancer who have received one or two prior chemotherapy regimens for advanced disease.

NCT ID: NCT03121612 Terminated - Clinical trials for Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Newborn

Comparison of CPAP Machines With Reusable vs Disposable Circuits

Start date: August 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study aims to assess the basic functionality of a newly designed CPAP machine with reusable circuits to existing machines with disposable circuits, for treatment of newborn infants diagnosed with respiratory distress syndrome. The assessment will compare a comprehensive list of physiological parameters over the first 72 hours of treatment, and will also monitor rates of side effects and adverse events. The null hypothesis is that infants treated on the two categories of machine (reusable vs disposable) will not differ in relation to key physiological parameters by more than 0.63 standard deviations.