There are about 25560 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Germany. 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.
This will be an open-label, single-arm, national phase 1/2 therapeutic study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and preliminary efficacy of [90Y]Y-PentixaTher ([90Y]Y-PTT) for the treatment of recurrent or refractory primary or isolated secondary central nervous system (CNS) lymphoma. The study will be performed in three cohorts with different dose levels according to the best-of-5 dose escalation design. A safety review committee (SRC) will evaluate dose-limiting toxicities and decide about escalation and de-escalation. Eligible patients will receive one cycle of [90Y]Y-PTT, which will be administered intravenously. There will be no comparator in this study. Safety, biodistribution, dosimetry and efficacy will be evaluated during the core study phase (Visit 1 until Visit 5). Thereafter three follow-up (FU) visits will take place, at three-months intervals to evaluate the extent of disease.
This study is open to adults aged 18 and older or above legal age who have a specific type of advanced neuroendocrine cancer (NEC). Their tumours must be positive for a marker called DLL3. The purpose of this study is to test a medicine called BI 764532 in addition to chemotherapy. The study has 2 parts. Part A of this study aims to find out the highest dose of BI 764532 that people can tolerate in addition to chemotherapy. The purpose of Part B is to find out how well people can tolerate BI 764532 in combination with different chemotherapies. Researchers also want to find out whether BI 764532 in combination with chemotherapy helps people with NEC. Participants get different doses of BI 764532 as an infusion into a vein. In addition, they get platinum-based chemotherapy as infusions into a vein. Participants can continue treatment up to 3 years if they benefit from treatment and can tolerate it. Participants visit their doctors regularly. During these visits, the doctors collect information about participants' health and take note of any unwanted effects. Doctors also regularly check the size of the tumour.
This is a parallel group, Phase 3, multinational, multicenter, randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled, 3-arm monotherapy study for treatment of participants diagnosed with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD), whose disease is not adequately controlled with topical prescription therapies or when those therapies are not advisable. The purpose of this study is to measure the efficacy and safety of treatment with amlitelimab solution for SC injection compared with placebo in participants with moderate to severe AD aged 12 years and older. Study details include: At the end of the treatment period, participants will have an option to enter a separate study: the blinded extension study EFC17600 (ESTUARY). For participants not entering the blinded extension Study EFC17600 (ESTUARY), the study duration will be up to 44 weeks including a 2 to 4-week screening, a 24-week randomized double-blind period, and a 16-week safety follow-up. For participants entering the blinded extension Study EFC17600 (ESTUARY), the study duration will be up to 28 weeks including a 2 to 4-week screening and a 24-week randomized double-blind period. The total treatment duration will be up to 24 weeks. The total number of visits will be up to 10 visits (or 9 visits for those entering the blinded extension study EFC17600] (ESTUARY).
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) is a sex-specific depressive disorder where depressive symptom severity drastically changes in relation to menstrual cycle phase. It is characterized by late luteal phase symptoms of affective lability, irritability, depressed mood, and anxiety. A lot remains unclear and further studies are needed in order to improve the understanding of PMDD and to differentiate it from major depressive disorder (MDD). To date, and in contrast to MDD, the neural correlates of PMDD have been sparsely and poorly investigated. The aim of this study is therefore to investigate the neural correlates of PMDD as compared to MDD and to relate them to stress reactivity. Therefore, three groups of naturally cycling women will be investigated and compared, namely (1) women with MDD, (2) women with PMDD, and (3) healthy control women. Stress and HPA axis activity are assumed to play a crucial role in the development of many mental disorders, including MDD. How stress reactivity and HPA axis activity are connected to PMDD still needs to be investigated. Furthermore, the HPA axis can affect or suppress the activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis, which is involved mainly in the reproductive, but also the immune system, making it an important candidate for the investigation of sex-specific differences in stress reactivity. There are sex-specific differences in stress reactivity, but also in the prevalence of stress-related diseases. Women are twice as likely to suffer from depression than men and the first onset of MDD usually peaks during the reproductive years. As to why these differences exist, a recent theory suggests that ovarian hormone fluctuations function as modulators of women's susceptibility to stress and that altered reactivity to stressors during different cycle phases plays a role in the etiology of depressive disorders. This hypothesis extends the Social Signal Transduction Theory of Depression which first and foremost relates depression to inflammation. They postulate a critical role of cytokines for understanding the pathogenesis of depression. Therefore, ovarian hormone fluctuations, but also inflammation in regard to MDD and PMDD and stress reactivity will be investigated in this study.
The main purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of volrustomig compared to observation in participants with unresected locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (LA-HNSCC) who have not progressed after receiving definitive concurrent chemoradiotherapy (cCRT).
Patient with paradoxical or conventional low-flow low-gradient aortic stenosis on echocardiographic assessment will undergo physiological exercise-stress CMR in addition to guideline recommended surveys prior to TAVR.
This is a clinical registry of patients with cardiac amyloidosis being treated at University Hospital Leipzig. The aim of the registry is to collect detailed information about clinical events, symptoms, imaging, biomarkers, comorbidities, and treatment from routine patient management which would not be provided by randomized clinical trails.
In the planned randomized controlled prospective pilot study, we aim to evaluate ADVOS compared with conventional hemodialysis regarding the elimination of protein-bound toxins in patients with therapy-refractory hepatorenal syndrome. The study will be performed in a regular non-ICU ward with a large experience in the use of the ADVOS therapy.
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), caused by amyloid beta depositions in the walls of small cerebral vessels, is remarkably common in the elderly. Its major clinical consequences include intracerebral hemorrhages (ICH) typically in lobar location, functional dependence (disability) and cognitive impairment. Cortical superficial siderosis (cSS) is a common finding in CAA patients and can even be the only magnetic resonance imaging sign of CAA. cSS is of high prognostic relevance regarding future intracerebral haemorrhage and disability. Previous studies suggest that cSS is caused by recurrent focal subarachnoid hemorrhages (fSAH). However, the exact mechanisms and the temporal dynamics of this highly relevant imaging finding are largely unknown. In addition to hemorrhagic manifestations, such as cSS, CAA patients also show ischemic lesions. Of particular interest are acute ischemic lesions as detected by diffusion imaging, which seem to be highly prevalent. Since haemorrhagic and ischemic lesions require fundamentally different therapeutic strategies, understanding the relevance and interplay of both lesion types is highly important for clinical decision making. The HIFI-CAA cohort study aims to provide novel insights into cSS, acute ischemic lesions and other relevant brain alterations in CAA through high-frequency (monthly) serial magnetic resonance imaging.
This open-label, single-arm study will evaluate the safety and expression of delandistrogene moxeparvovec in participants with DMD. Participants will be in the study for approximately 264 weeks.