There are about 28871 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Canada. 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 primary objective of this study is to obtain prospective baseline documentation of annualized bleeding rates (ABRs) and treatment under standard-of-care (SOC) therapy among participants with hemophilia A or B. Participants in the study may be eligible to enroll in future planned interventional studies to be conducted by Sponsor.
This study is being done to answer the following questions: - Is the new drug, RP-6306, safe to use, and what effects does it have on cancer when given with standard treatment? - If there are specific biomarkers, do patients have an improved response to treatment compared to those without the biomarker? This study is being done to find out if this approach is better or worse than the usual approach for this type of cancer. The usual approach is defined as care most people get for this type of cancer.
Tourniquet inflation during total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is commonly used to reduce bleeding in the surgical field; thereby facilitating exposure and cementation. However, reducing circulation to the leg may also reduce antibiotic distribution to the peri-incisional tissues. Once inflated, further parenteral addition of antibiotics is not likely to achieve peak concentration. Some studies propose techniques of regional prophylaxis with a tourniquet to achieve higher cefazolin tissue concentrations. To our knowledge, the effect of tourniquet application on antibiotic tissue concentrations during total knee arthroplasty has not been explored. Furthermore, the effect of time from dose to incision, participants weight, and length of surgery on local tissue concentrations of Ancef are poorly understood. Considering that infections remain the leading source of early reoperation and revision surgery, insight and optimization of local tissue antibiotics is of paramount interest.
Emotion Focused Family Therapy (EFFT) is a promising intervention that aims to teach parents advanced skills to support their child's development of emotion skills and increase their adaptive behaviours, potentially leading to improvements in their child's psychological functioning and family functioning more broadly. This randomized controlled trial (RCT; EFFT vs waitlist control) will (1) test the efficacy of a 6-week group EFFT program on parent and child outcomes and (2) examine maintenance of treatment gains up to four months post-intervention.
This randomized controlled trial will investigate the hypothesis that since balance and executive functions (EFs) require a similar neural circuit and EFs are recruited when trying to maintain balance, that training balance might improve EFs as well as balance. There will be an active control condition (watching music videos) and a no-treatment condition. Children (18-12 years old) will be randomly assigned to one of these conditions for 12 weeks (36 per condition). The balance and music conditions will involve 15-min sessions 3x/week and a weekly check-in session with an investigator. Participants will be assessed pre-intervention, immediately post and 3-months post.
Multimorbidity, the co-occurrence of several chronic conditions, is a growing phenomenon that poses new challenges for clinicians and researchers. The association between a mental health disorder and a physical health disorder represents a particularly frequent subtype of multimorbidity and is associated with greater severity and higher consumption of care. It is essential and urgent to explore the specific pathophysiology of this subtype of multimorbidity in order to develop adapted therapeutic strategies. Psychiatric disorders, such as mood disorders, anxiety disorders, attention deficit disorder and binge eating disorder, are common in people with obesity. For example, although most of these disorders may improve after bariatric surgery, some components of these disorders, such as emotional dysregulation and impulsivity, need to be addressed as they appear to be involved in the development of addiction and suicidality after bariatric surgery. Therefore, screening and vigilance of these risks appear increasingly necessary. To address this challenge, the BariaPsy databank aims to explore the screening of certain mental health disorders frequently observed in adults with obesity through an innovative approach that explores behaviors in the form of dimensions. It will help clinicians to quickly identify markers of certain disorders, thus helping them to further investigate the problem and provide personalized resources to their patient.
The primary outcome of this study is to determine the true incidence of smokers among patients undergoing joint replacement and secondly, what percent are able to quit smoking before surgery under a structured cessation program with carbon monoxide breath testing. The investigators hypothesize that self-reported smoking status is underreported and that routine carbon monoxide breath testing will improve abstinence rates at the time of surgery.
This is a randomized trial testing a supplement that has been approved by Health Canada to support healthy cholesterol levels (i.e. high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol). This trial is proposing to use this approved supplement to determine whether it is able to raise HDL cholesterol in patients treated in the intensive care unit (ICU) with severe infection who have detrimentally low levels of HDL cholesterol. Patients who present to the ICU with severe infection will be approached for consent. If they choose to participate, patients will be given usual care or a 150mL daily nutritional supplement containing lauric acid (15 ml) and Berberine (1000 mg) daily for 14 days. Participants will be followed during their stay in the ICU and will receive follow up phone calls at Day 28 and 90.
Patient reported outcomes are becoming increasingly recognized as an important metric to determine efficacy of interventions following recovery after cardiac surgery. Quality of Recovery 15 survey is a tool that attempts to measure patients' recovery across several different domains (i.e physical, emotional and social). This tool has been validated extensively in the post operative patient population, but these studies contained only small numbers of cardiac surgery patients. This population faces unique challenges to recovery such as a longer duration of mechanical ventilation, ICU and hospital LOS, delirium, significant pain in the first 24-48 hours and post operative arrhythmias. This study aims to validate the QoR 15 in this population exclusively to determine if it is feasible, valid, reliable and responsive in this unique population.
This is a single-arm, open-label study that will examine the effect of abrocitinib in subjects with atopic dermatitis.