There are about 36818 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in China. 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 goal of this observational study is to evaluate the clinical efficacy of the transfusion of irradiated red blood cells, washed red blood cells, and leukocyte privative red blood cells, and to study the changes of inflammatory response before and after the transfusion of irradiated red blood cells, washed red blood cells, and leukocyte privative red blood cells in anemic neonates. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Objective evaluation of the advantages and disadvantages of transfusion of different blood products in the treatment of neonatal anemia from the clinical efficacy. - To provide objective basis for clinical rational use of blood in the selection of blood products. Participants will be transfused with fresh irradiated red blood cells, washed red blood cells, and leukocyte privative red blood cells respectively according to relevant clinical and laboratory indicators.
This study proposes to conduct a prospective, multicenter, single-arm study to explore the efficacy and safety of venetoclax in combination with high-dose decitabine (DEC3-VEN) in new diagnosed adult patients with AML, and to provide evidence for the optimal selection of clinical treatment regimens, which is planned to be conducted in 10 research centers across the country.
This study plans to enroll 80 patients with locally advanced cervical cancer (stage IB-ⅣA) confirmed by histology or cytology (according to the 2018 FIGO staging standard), who are expected to receive surgical resection or curative radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Collect baseline tumor tissue samples from patients during the treatment period, as well as peripheral blood samples (20 ml/time) from multiple treatment timepoints. Mutations in tumor tissue were detected by the 1021 genes panel, then personalized MRD monitoring probes were customized for patients, allowing for multi node peripheral blood sample ctDNA detection of enrolled patients. The clinical significance of ctDNA in prognostic stratification, recurrence monitoring, and efficacy prediction in surgical/non-surgical cervical cancer patients was explored. And compare the consistency and differences between ctDNA detection technology, imaging, and blood tumor markers in monitoring tumor disease progression, and evaluate the correlation between ctDNA status after curative treatment and patient PFS and RFS.
This is a multicenter, open-label phase I/II study, divided into 2 parts: Part 1 involves a dose-escalation study of ZG006 in which the safety and tolerability of ZG006 in patients with advanced small cell lung cancer or neuroendocrine carcinoma are explored. Upon completion of Part 1, investigators and the sponsor will discuss and determine two recommended phase II doses (RP2D) based on safety, preliminary efficacy, and pharmacokinetic (PK) results for use in Part 2. Part 2 is a phase II dose-expansion study of ZG006, aiming to investigate the efficacy and safety of ZG006 in patients with advanced small cell lung cancer.
This study is an investigator-initiated, prospective, open-label, single-arm, multicenter clinical trial aimed at exploring the antitumor activity of Lorlatinib in ALK-positive NSCLC patients with brain/ leptomeningeal metastases.
TORCH-iTNT is a prospective, multicentre, randomized phase II trial. 198 LARC (T3-4/N+M0, distance from anal verge ≤12cm) patients will be treated with total neoadjuvant therapy (TNT) and assigned to Group A and Group B (1:1). Group A receives 6 cycles of Toripalimab combined with CAPOX (ToriCAPOX). Group B receives SCRT (25Gy/5Fx) followed by 6 cycles of ToriCAPOX. TME surgery is scheduled after TNT while a watch and wait (W&W) option can be applied to patients achieving clinical complete response (cCR). The primary endpoint is complete response (CR, pathological complete response [pCR] plus cCR) rate. The secondary endpoints include the grade 3-4 acute adverse effects (AE) rate, anal preservation rate, 3-year DFS rate, etc.
A considerable number of patients presented with anatomically successful PCI results still suffer from functionally unresolved ischemia, which might be the cause for over one-fourth of patients experiencing recurrent angina at 1 year or adverse events at 2 years. Currently, the post-PCI physiology measurement is one of the effective metrics to quantify residual ischemia, and a suboptimal post-PCI result is strongly associated with worse outcomes. However, PCI optimization based on post-PCI physiology is, to certain extent, a provisional rescue action for a suboptimal index procedure, which may not be fully correctable "after the fact" given selected stents, site of deployment and procedural technique. Computed tomography (CT) coronary physiology-derived virtual stenting (CT-VS) based on pre-PCI CCTA angiograms is an augmented reality (AR) approach that simulates the post-stenting physiology assuming that the specified segment of the treated vessel is successfully dilated by implanting virtual stents. Previous studies have demonstrated the feasibility of optimizing PCI with CT-VS, with high consistency between pre-PCI simulated physiology result by CT-VS and actual post-PCI physiology results. Therefore, the application of CT-VS would help physicians to develop the best strategies while planning the procedure. However, there is a lack of knowledge regarding the efficacy of this novel physiological index that is available pre-PCI in achieving final post-PCI optimal physiological result. The Trials of "Computed Tomography Coronary Physiology-derived Virtual Stenting Guided Revascularization Strategy in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease (CT-COMPASS)" was designed to assess the efficacy of a CT-VS vs. standard angiographic guidance in achieving post-PCI optimal physiological result (post-PCI FFR≥0.90).
This is a non-randomized, open label, single-dose study in up to 41 participants with β-thalassemia major. The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of KL003 cell injection in subjects with β-thalassemia major.
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of cadonilimab combined with Regorafenib in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma who failed camrelizumab plus apatinib.
The goal of this clinical trial is to conduct a dietary intervention targeting HIV-specific gut microbiota alterations for primary ASCVD prevention and evaluate its effectiveness in preventing borderline ASCVD risk among HIV-infected patients. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Explore the pivotal role of the gut-heart axis in the causal relationship between HIV infection and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. - Develop a targeted dietary intervention focusing on gut microbiota to prevent the borderline risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in HIV-infected patients. - Evaluate the effectiveness of the gut microbiota-targeted dietary intervention in reducing atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk among HIV-infected patients, altering gut microbiota composition, improving risk factors of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, and alleviating prodromal symptoms associated with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Participants in the intervention group will receive the gut microbiota-targeted dietary intervention thrice weekly for 3 months, accompanied by bi-weekly health education videos for the same duration. Meanwhile, the control group will continue routine follow-up and health education practices. The intervention will span three months, followed by a three-month follow-up period. Data collection will occur at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months.