There are about 13446 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Belgium. 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 pre-approval access program is to provide talquetamab for the treatment of participants with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma.
This Expanded Access Program in Belgium is open to people with different lung diseases. This program provides a medicine called nintedanib to people who have no alternative treatment options. They can participate if they have a type of lung disease called non-IPF ILDs (chronic fibrosing interstitial lung diseases with a progressive phenotype other than idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis). Participants take 2 capsules of nintedanib a day. The treating physician checks the health of the participants and notes health problems that could have been caused by nintedanib. Participants receive nintedanib as long as they benefit or until nintedanib becomes commercially available in Belgium. For a patient to participate in this program, their treating physician should apply to Boehringer Ingelheim.
This is a multi-center, expanded access protocol to provide access to the investigational product, abrocitinib, to adolescent and adult patients with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis who have inadequate treatment options with available and approved medicated topical and systemic therapies and who are otherwise ineligible for participation in clinical studies with abrocitinib.
An Expanded Access Program for UROMUNE® for patients suffering from recurrent/chronic urinary tract infections of diverse etiology. This is for individuals for whom antibiotic therapy has failed, but of consideration in all cases, taking into account antibiotic-induced adverse reactions and increasing antibiotic resistance.
This expanded access program is designed to make fremanezumab available to patients with EM or CM who have successfully completed (per protocol) Teva-sponsored Study TV48125-CNS-30051 or TV48125-CNS-30068 ("prior studies") until fremanezumab becomes commercially available in their country.
To provide access to maraviroc to patients who have limited or no therapeutic treatment options and to collect more safety data in a broader patient population.
This is a phase IIIb, multi-centre, open-label extension study in male subjects with DMD who previously have been treated with drisapersen, aiming at assessing the safety and efficacy of drisapersen.
The Extended Access Program (EAP) is a managed access programme for Perampanel. The main objective of this EAP is to ensure that patients participating in studies E2007-A001-207, E2007-G000-307, or E2007-G000-235 continue to have access to perampanel until such time perampanel tablets become commercially available for the treatment of Partial Onset Seizures (POS) in the country in which they reside. This EAP will consist of 2 phases: - Screening: The patient will start the program once the Screening assessments are completed and the patient is qualified for participation. - Treatment: Additional assessments, physical examinations, and dosage changes will be clinically determined by the treating physician. Patients will enter this program on the same dose of perampanel that they were receiving at the end of their participation in previous study. Doses of perampanel and of concomitant anti-epileptic drugs (AEDs) can be adjusted (i.e., added,removed, or changed in dose) based on clinical judgment. Treatment will be prescribed as long as clinically appropriate according to the judgement of the treating physician and the approved Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC). The program will complete in a staggered fashion, country by country, as and when perampanel becomes commercially available for the treatment of POS in each country.
The aim of the study is to assess safety, tolerability and clinical effects of different doses of riociguat in patients with inoperable Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension (CTEPH) and who are not satisfactorily treated and cannot participate in any other CTEPH trial. In the US the study runs as an Expanded Access program under 21 CFR 312.320.
This is an open-label protocol designed to provide continued access to maraviroc to only those subjects who have completed previous studies of maraviroc and continue to receive clinical benefit.