Clinical Trials Logo

Risk Reduction clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Risk Reduction.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT05296980 Recruiting - Healthy Aging Clinical Trials

Validation of the REMINDER Dementia Risk Reduction Program

REMINDER
Start date: April 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Until now, neuropsychological interventions aimed to optimize cognitive function and to have functional impact in individuals at risk of AD (MCI patients) were scarce in validity studies. While some RCTs have been developed in cognitive training interventions, comparative studies of merged interventions (cognitive, social and behavioral stimulation) with adequate control groups are absent, diminishing the professionals' trust on the adoption of these interventions for supporting patients. As such, the present proposal will develop a validation trial testing a multicomponent neuropsychological intervention (REMINDER), based on personal development, cognitive compensatory aids, meaningful goals setting, and behavior change techniques. The investigators will analyze its short/long-term gains and AD conversion rates. By aiming to provide a good validation study for REMINDER, the investigators will examine neurobiological, neurocognitive and functional outcomes of this intervention in comparison with an active control group (psychoeducation) in order to foster an effective outcome assessment of an intervention for individuals at risk of AD.

NCT ID: NCT05283512 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Kidney Failure, Chronic

Intravenous vs. Oral Hydration to Reduce the Risk of Post-Contrast Acute Kidney Injury After Intravenous Contrast-Enhanced Computed Tomography in Patients With Severe Chronic Kidney Disease

ENRICH
Start date: April 20, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The use of contrast media (CM) poses a risk of post-contrast acute kidney injury (PC-AKI), especially among patients chronic kidney disease (CKD). International guidelines recommend intravenous (IV) hydration with isotonic 0.9% NaCl for three-four hours pre-contrast and four-six hours post-contrast. Recent studies have proven that oral hydration or no hydration is non-inferior to IV hydration in patients with mild to moderate CKD (eGFR 30-60 mL/min/1.73 m2). However, no randomized controlled trials have evaluated alternative hydration methods against the guideline-recommended hydration protocol for the prevention of PC-AKI in high-risk patients with severe CKD (eGFR < 30 mL/min/1.73 m2). Thus, the main focus of this trial is to evaluate IV hydration vs. oral hydration for their efficacy to prevent of PC-AKI in patients with severe CKD, who are scheduled for an elective contrast-enhanced CT-scan (CECT) with IV contrast-administration. Our research hypotheses consist of the following: 1. Oral hydration with bottled tap water is non-inferior to IV-hydration with isotonic 0.9% NaCl as renal prophylaxis to prevent PC-AKI in patients with severe CKD referred for an elective IV CECT. 2. NGAL and cfDNA are early and precise plasma and urinary biomarkers of PC-AKI with excellent diagnostic and prognostic accuracy for PC-AKI, dialysis, renal adverse events, hospitalization, progression in CKD-symptoms, and all-cause mortality.

NCT ID: NCT05256199 Active, not recruiting - Cognitive Decline Clinical Trials

Dutch Multidomain Lifestyle Intervention in Older Adults at Risk of Cognitive Decline

FINGER-NL
Start date: February 24, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

FINGER-NL is a multi-center, randomized, controlled, multidomain lifestyle intervention trial among 1,206 older adults at risk for cognitive decline with a duration of 24 months. Participants are randomized in a 1:1 ratio to a personalized multi-domain lifestyle intervention (high-intensity intervention group) versus online access to general lifestyle-related health information (low-intensity intervention group).

NCT ID: NCT05148338 Recruiting - Atrial Fibrillation Clinical Trials

Prevention to Improve Outcomes After PVI

POP
Start date: December 16, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac arrhythmia and has a rising prevalence due to an aging population. AF increases the patient's risk of hospitalization, heart failure and stroke and results into deterioration of quality of life. Treatment of symptomatic AF consists of either antiarrhythmic medication or a pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) catheter ablation. However, lots of patients experience recurrence of AF in the first year after PVI. Previous studies showed that PVI outcomes depend on the presence of different treatable risk factors that influence the substrate for AF. Those risk factors include obesity, hypertension, cholesterol, diabetes mellitus, alcohol use, smoking and obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. However, research into the effect of treatment of those risk factors mainly consists of observational studies. Currently, it is not clear to what extent patients will benefit from comprehensive risk factor treatment prior to PVI in terms of ablation success and quality of life. The aim of the current randomized controlled trial is to determine the effect of a nurse-led, technology-supported, personalized care pathway on hospital admissions for cardioversions and re-ablation in patients with AF that are referred for ablation. Patients included in this study will be randomized to either the intervention group receiving the comprehensive risk treatment before PVI or the control group receiving standard usual care. Patients in the intervention group will visit the specialized AF nurse outpatient clinic and receive a personalized treatment plan (with a maximal duration of 6 months) including lifestyle interventions and medication. This includes sleep apnea screening with a Home Sleep Apnea Test (WatchPAT). Patients will also use the VitalHealth Engage platform. The digital platform can be used at home to report AF complaints, send home measurement and complete questionnaires. Furthermore, it supports the nurse in administering effective lifestyle changes by offering the patient personalized content and education. Both study groups will be followed up to 12 months after ablation, during which hospital admissions for cardioversion and re-ablation are evaluated. At baseline, AFEQT, EQ5D and TBQ quality of life questionnaires will be performed. The questionnaires will be repeated prior to ablation, at 3 and 12 months after ablation. At baseline, pre-ablation and after 12 months laboratory tests (such as cholesterol) will be performed to evaluate adherence to lifestyle interventions.

NCT ID: NCT05108935 Completed - Hiv Clinical Trials

Providing PrEP, Hepatitis C Treatment, and MOUD Through Telemedicine at Greensboro SSP

PARTNERUP
Start date: February 17, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to provide medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) with buprenorphine and naloxone, or bup/nx, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention, and/or hepatitis C treatment for persons who inject opioids accessing syringe services programs (SSPs), as part of a comprehensive harm reduction program, and assess the acceptability and feasibility of using telemedicine to implement the program. The initial visit will be conducted in person or remotely via telemedicine given COVID-19 protocols at the SSP site in Greensboro, North Carolina (NC); follow-up visits will be conducted via telemedicine.

NCT ID: NCT05057650 Completed - Nutrition Disorders Clinical Trials

Help Everyone Assess Risk Today: LEnten Nutrition Study (HEART-LENS)

Start date: March 3, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of community health screening, health education and nutritional intervention on risk factors for cardiovascular disease in a predominantly African American population. The health fair and intervention will take place in a church that typically improves their lifestyle by "giving up for Lent" certain foods or habits. Participation in this nutrition intervention is voluntary and each participant will sign an informed consent along with a waiver. On the waiver, the participant can agree to have all testing performed but can withdraw consent at any time or decide to have only some of the testing. It was hypothesized that a community-based health screening and nutritional intervention will have a positive impact on the participants by: 1. Measuring baseline risk factors 2. Educating them about their individual risk for heart disease 3. Providing education on healthy lifestyle 4. Providing a nutritional intervention for 40 days with home- delivered plant-based meals nutrition that has been shown to lower cardiac risk factors 5. Repeating the risk factor assessment at the end of the intervention, to demonstrate the degree of, if any, reduction in cardiac risk as assessed by the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease (ASCVD) Risk Calculator 6. Motivating at-risk subjects to seek continued appropriate medical care and to institute more permanent relevant lifestyle changes (e.g., diet, exercise, medication compliance).

NCT ID: NCT05017948 Recruiting - Risk Reduction Clinical Trials

Alleviating Geriatric Inpatients' Medication-related Iatrogenesis

AGING
Start date: September 15, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the MedWise Risk Score™ (MWRS™), a holistic approach to quantifying the risk of a patient's medication regimen. High risk patients will be identified at hospital discharge. Targeted interventions will be made to reduce their MWRS™ with a 30-day follow up. The hypothesis being tested is that a reduction in MWRS™ will lead to reduced 30-day readmission.

NCT ID: NCT05009251 Completed - Influenza Clinical Trials

Using Explainable AI Risk Predictions to Nudge Influenza Vaccine Uptake

Start date: September 9, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study team previously demonstrated that patients are more likely to receive flu vaccine after learning that they are at high risk for flu complications. Building on this past work, the present study will explore whether providing reasons that patients are considered high risk for flu complications (a) further increases the likelihood they will receive flu vaccine and (b) decreases the likelihood that they receive diagnoses of flu and/or flu-like symptoms in the ensuing flu season. It will also examine whether informing patients that their high-risk status was determined by analyzing their medical records or by an artificial intelligence (AI) / machine-learning (ML) algorithm analyzing their medical records will affect the likelihood of receiving the flu vaccine or diagnoses of flu and/or flu-like symptoms.

NCT ID: NCT04998734 Terminated - Quality of Life Clinical Trials

Validation of the ASI-SR Form in a Population of Chronic Non-cancer Pain Patients

ASI-SR
Start date: August 5, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The Swedish version of ASI-SR has shown good feasibility in assessment of addiction patients functioning compare to long and time-consuming ASI, which is upp to date golden standard in Sweden. This study investigate if ASI-SR is suitable instrument for the assessment of the chronic pain patient addicted to opioids. The validation process is designed according to the COSMIN guidelines. Preliminary results are expected by December 2022.

NCT ID: NCT04821141 Recruiting - Breast Cancer Clinical Trials

Phase IIB Trial of Bazedoxifene Plus Conjugated Estrogens

Start date: December 14, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Women at risk for development of breast cancer and experiencing vasomotor menopausal symptoms (hot flashes) will be randomized to bazedoxifene (BZA) plus conjugated estrogens (CE) for 6 months versus a wait list control. Two risk factors for development of breast cancer will be studied pre-study and after 6 months: fibroglandular volume (FGV) on mammogram as assessed by Volpara software and proliferation by Ki-67 immunocytochemistry in benign breast tissue acquired by random periareolar fine needle aspiration (RPFNA). Change in biomarkers will be compared between groups.