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NCT ID: NCT05960630 Recruiting - Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trials

MIRRORS-RCT Pilot: Role of Robotic Interval Cytoreductive Surgery for Advanced Ovarian Cancer

MIRRORS-RCTP
Start date: October 2, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The survival of ovarian cancer patients is dependent on the stage at diagnosisÍž more than 70% of patients present with advanced stage disease (stage III/IV). In England, one-year survival is 98.7% at stage I and 51.4% at stage IV and five-year survival is 93.3% and 13.4% respectively. Standard treatment for advanced ovarian cancer involves surgery to remove all visible tumour and chemotherapy. Removal of all visible disease, so no tumour deposits are visible to the naked eye at the end of first-line surgery, is one of the strongest predictors of overall survival. A majority of the women presenting with advanced disease are older and frail. Extensive open surgery discriminates against such women as they may not be well enough for the surgery offered. A recent national audit in England found that 60.1% of women over the age of 79yrs diagnosed with ovarian cancer received no cancer treatment at all. The ability to provide the same surgery via a minimally invasive route such as robotic surgery potentially widens access to cancer treatment. The MIRRORS Feasibility study (NCT04402333) completed recently at the Royal Surrey County Hospital in Guildford showed significantly enhanced recovery with short length of stay and reduced blood loss enabling faster recommencement of chemotherapy in women with advanced disease undergoing robotic surgery compared to open surgery (requiring a cut in the abdomen). In the current proposed study funded by Intuitive Foundation and GRACE Charity, the investigators will establish the feasibility of conducting a randomised controlled trial and collect data from three hospital sites to inform a future phase 3 randomised controlled trial. The aim will be to to improve patient experience, access to surgery, recovery, reduce morbidity and reduce time to chemotherapy by incorporating robotic cytoreductive surgery into the ovarian cancer treatment pathway for women with a pelvic mass </=8cm

NCT ID: NCT05960344 Completed - Spirometry Clinical Trials

The SPIRO-MOTE Study

Start date: February 24, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Multicentre Prospective Cohort Study of Remote Lung Function Testing in Children: validation and comparison of supervised and unsupervised spirometry

NCT ID: NCT05960279 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Craniocerebral Trauma

Microwave Imaging in NeuroTrauma

MINT
Start date: July 20, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The study aims to investigate whether microwave-based technology can be used as a bedside decision-making aid to identify patients who may have a bleed in their head. The MD100 is a microwave-based head scanner, developed for the purpose of detecting strokes. In clinical trials, it was noticed that the device performed better when the patient suffered a stroke due to a bleed. It was believed that this device had wider applications in trauma care. The MD100 has demonstrated a very high level of accuracy in detecting bleeds in small clinical trials in the non-acute setting. The device is supported by software that determines the presence of a bleed. This study will be set in the emergency department of major trauma centres. Patients that have sustained a head injury will be considered for enrollment into the study. Following a head CT scan, patients will be scanned by the MD100. The trial will run in two phases. In phase one: the findings from the patient's head CT scan will be used to trial the device and teach the software what it is scanning. In phase two: The MD100 will be tested to see whether it can concur with the findings of the patient's CT scan, this will be used to determine the accuracy and reliability of the device.

NCT ID: NCT05959681 Recruiting - Cellulite Clinical Trials

Longitudinal Trial Assessing Cellulite in Women Wearing a New Compression Garment

Start date: August 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators are investigating a compression garment that appears to reduce the appearance of Cellulite. The garment has both compression and patented ink-printed micro-dots ("Vari-pads"). These Vari-pads on the inner aspect of the garment are thought to increase the lymphatic return over compression alone. In this study, volunteers with cellulite are asked to wear the garment, with only one side (left or right) having the active Vari-pads. The participants wear the garment for at least 8 hours per day. If, and when, the participants notice a difference between the sides (left and right sides), the participants will notify the investigators. At this point the participants will be invited to the trial centre for an assessment and to be swapped to a garment with Vari-pads on both sides. Apart from this variable end-point, the participants will be reviewed routinely at 3 and 6 months. The trial ends at 6 months.

NCT ID: NCT05958875 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Schizophrenia and Related Disorders

The Effect of a Six Week Intensified Pharmacological Treatment for Schizophrenia Compared to Treatment as Usual in Subjects Who Had a First-time Treatment Failure on Their First-line Treatment.

INTENSIFY SZ
Start date: May 31, 2024
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Schizophrenia (SZ) affects approximately 4.5 million people across the European Union (EU) and is associated with annual healthcare and societal costs of 29 billion Euros. The impact on the daily life of patients is huge, ranging from frequent relapses and hospitalisations, the inability to maintain a job or continue scholing, to a low quality of life, impaired cognitive functioning, suicidal ideation and an increase morbidity rate, next to the large burden for carers 1. When diagnosed with schizophrenia or related disorder, patients are commonly prescribed antipsychotics. One-third of the schizophrenia patients are regarded treatment-resistant (TR), meaning that at least two antipsychotic trials have failed. Typically, clozapine is prescribed for TR patients, which is effective for approximately 40% of patients. Clozapine is among the most effective treatments, with the lowest all-cause mortality. Although it is among the most effective antipsychotics, it is generally not used earlier in the illness course due to a small risk of severe neutropenia/agranulocytosis, which is why patients treated with clozapine are intensely monitored. However, this small risk outweighs the burden of not receiving an effective treatment. Since clozapine is among the most effective treatments, this leads to the research question whether earlier initiation of third-line treatment ('early intensified' pharmacological treatment; EIPT) would be more beneficial than the current second-line treatments (treatment as usual; TAU). If this is indeed the case, this could lead to the prevention of unnecessary trials of ineffective treatments, hospitalisations, and recommendations for adaptations of worldwide guidelines as well as a reduction of healthcare and societal costs The INTENSIFY-Schizophrenia trial is part of the larger Horizon 2021 project Psych-STRATA, with the central goal of paving the way for a shift towards a treatment decision-making process tailored for the individual at risk for treatment resistance. To that end, the inestigators aim to establish evidence-based criteria to make decisions of early intense treatment in individuals at risk for treatment resistance across the major psychiatric disorders of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and major depression. The current protocol focuses on the sample of schizophrenia patients.

NCT ID: NCT05958680 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Autism Spectrum Disorder

ASDactive: An Integrated Theory-based Intervention to Promote Habitual Physical Activity

ASDactive
Start date: October 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

ASDactive is a theory-based behaviour change intervention aimed at improving the physical activity behaviours of autistic youth. The feasibility of the intervention will be tested through interviews with participants and stakeholders. "Proof of concept" will be tested through preliminary measures of physical activity measured before and after the intervention.

NCT ID: NCT05958407 Recruiting - Atopic Dermatitis Clinical Trials

A 32-week Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Tralokinumab in Subjects With Moderate-to-severe Atopic Hand Eczema Who Are Candidates for Systemic Therapy

ADHAND
Start date: August 28, 2023
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to test if treatment with tralokinumab is safe and effectful to treat moderate-to-severe atopic hand eczema. This will be judged by a range of assessments that rate the severity and extent of atopic hand eczema and its symptoms, as well as general health status and quality of life. The trial will last for up to 40 weeks. There will be up to 15 visits, 3 of which will be conducted by phone. The first part of the trial is called a screening period and will last up to 4 weeks. For the first 16 weeks after screening, trial participants will receive either tralokinumab or dummy injections every two weeks. After the first 16 weeks, all trial participants will receive tralokinumab injections every two weeks for 16 weeks. The last part of the trial is a period of 4 weeks after the end of treatment period, where trial participants are off the drug for safety follow-up.

NCT ID: NCT05958030 Not yet recruiting - Essential Tremor Clinical Trials

GyroGlove Use in Essential Tremor Patients

Start date: June 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a multi-centre, single-blind, placebo-controlled trial with an open label follow up. After the baseline assessment, all participants will receive the GyroGlove for two weeks during the open label follow up part of the trial. All gloves will be retrieved and returned to GyroGear after closure of the study.

NCT ID: NCT05957276 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Inherited Retinal Diseases

Global Patient Registry of Inherited Retinal Diseases

EYERD Registry
Start date: August 31, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to better understand the natural history of Inherited Retinal Disease (IRD) and help inform patient management.

NCT ID: NCT05956912 Recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

Implementing Group Metacognitive Therapy in Cardiac Rehabilitation Services (PATHWAY-Beacons)

Start date: September 6, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Background: Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) services aim to improve heart disease patients' health and quality of life and reduce the risk of further cardiac events. Depression and anxiety are common among CR patients, and current psychological treatments for cardiac patients have minor effects. However, the NIHR-funded PATHWAY trial found that group Metacognitive Therapy (MCT) was associated with improvements in anxiety and depression when added to CR and was more effective than usual CR alone. Group MCT was also associated with preventing anxiety and depression. The next steps will establish beacon sites for delivering MCT and pilot-test additions to the national audit of cardiac rehabilitation (NACR) data capture mechanism to include an MCT data field. Such steps will support a quantitative and qualitative evaluation of implementation. Methods: The investigators aim to address questions concerning the quality of patient data recorded, level of adoption at sites, the characteristics of patients attending MCT, the impact of adding MCT to CR on mental health outcomes, and patient, healthcare staff and commissioner views of barriers/enablers to implementation. The investigators will deliver training in group MCT to CR staff from CR services across England. The investigators will conduct semi-structured qualitative interviews with CR staff trained in group MCT to assess views on the training programme, including successes and barriers to implementation of training and delivery. The investigators will interview 8-10 CR stakeholders to identify any barriers to implementation and how these might be resolved. Discussion: The study will support development of an NHS roll-out strategy and systematic data collection that can be used to evaluate wide-scale implementation. The study can benefit service users by improving patients' mental health outcomes and CR practitioners' clinical skills. Results will be disseminated via peer-reviewed journals, national and international conferences and service user/voluntary sector organisations and networks.