There are about 25435 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in United Kingdom. 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.
Primary Objective: To assess whether there is a higher incidence of uninformative ultrasound in black vs white women
Breathlessness is a common problem for many patients with Interstitial lung disease (ILD). ILD is a group of lung diseases that cause inflammation (swelling) and scarring in the lung tissue where gas exchange (oxygen and carbon dioxide) occurs. Unfortunately, there is no cure for these conditions and as a result many patients decline over time with worsening breathlessness. This limits their ability to live a good life. Clinicians do not often recognize, assess, or treat breathlessness appropriately. Breathlessness, being a subjective experience, cannot be fully understood through objective measurements such as lung function tests, the arterial blood gas test etc. The objective and subjective measures of breathlessness are frequently disconnected. Clinicians who often rely on these types of objective tests do not directly enquire into its nature and severity of breathlessness from patients themselves. As a result, they remain unaware of this disabling symptom and the extent of its impact on patients. While there are many tools to measure breathlessness, they are not consistently used in routine care or have impacted care in a meaningful way. Many such tools are also complex with intricate response systems with possibility of errors and user fatigue. As a result, easy to use tools like modified MRC or MRC are frequently used even though they do not assess severity of breathlessness. No tool has been effective at helping clinicians identify the problem and prescribe appropriate treatments. This results in needless suffering for patients and their families and prevents them from receiving timely and appropriate therapies. Investigators propose to test an easy-to-use tool that combines the subjective and objective aspects of breathlessness. Investigators hope that the tool will help clinicians quickly identify the patient's breathlessness severity and provide them with an algorithm of what to do next. The tool was developed by clinicians with +15 years of experience in ILD and dyspnea. Early analysis already suggests the tool is useful to patients and helps improve care.
The purpose of this research study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the study product on vasomotor symptoms (VMS) and overall menopause symptoms in healthy women, who are perimenopausal or postmenopausal, and aged 40 - 65.
Brief summary: There is current scientific interest in hydroxytyrosol due to its anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, efficient protection of vascular tissue and ability to neutralise free radicals via hydrogen donation. Recognised as the potent polyphenol within a commercially available olive-fruit water (OliPhenolia®), data from this research will determine the dose of OliPhenolia® required for the optimum absorption and metabolism of hydroxytyrosol. The primary aim of this research is to identify the dose of hydroxytyrosol (0.5, 1.0 or 1.5 mg∙kg-1) within OliPhenolia® that demonstrates the greatest area under the plasma concentration curve for hydroxytyrosol over a four-hour period. A secondary aim is to assess maximum concentration (CMAX) and time to maximum concentration (TMAX) of total hydroxytyrosol and secondary metabolites (Tyrosol, HT-3-glucoronide, HT-3-sulphate, 3,4-Dihydroxyphenylacetic Acid, Homovanillic Acid and Oleuropein) following consumption of 3 randomised doses of OliPhenolia® on separate occasions with healthy adult volunteers.
This study will help determine if an Interactive Virtual Reality system can improve the physiotherapy of young patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD).
The primary objective of the study is to evaluate the pharmacokinetics (PK) of rocatinlimab given as a single subcutaneous (SC) dose in a vial compared to a prefilled syringe in healthy participants.
Heart failure is a condition in which the heart stops pumping effectively, causing symptoms such as breathlessness or leg swelling. It affects around 900,000 people in the United Kingdom. As our population gets older, this number will continue rise. It is a condition with poor overall survival - nearly 50% of patients die within 5 years of being diagnosed with heart failure. Cardiac cachexia is a complex condition associated with heart failure. There is general loss of muscle with or without loss of fat in cardiac cachexia. The main feature of cardiac cachexia is therefore unintentional weight loss in heart failure patients. The reason why it develops is poorly understood currently. Importantly, some studies have shown that cardiac cachexia is more likely to lead to poorer outcomes (such as death) in the patients who develop it. However, there have been no studies, to our knowledge, that look at this condition in those patients who have very weak hearts ('advanced heart failure'). The investigators are looking to clarify how common cardiac cachexia is within advanced heart failure patients, and secondly how outcomes compare to those advanced heart failure patients that do not have the condition. With this in mind, the investigators will be able to establish the fuller impact cardiac cachexia has on survival and outcomes in patients with advanced heart failure. This study will involve assessing a group of ~200 advanced heart failure patients for cardiac cachexia to establish an estimate of how common it is overall. The investigators will then follow up the patients over a year, to see if we can assess the impact of cardiac cachexia on survival and outcomes. Overall, the investigators therefore hope this study will give a more robust picture on the true impact of cardiac cachexia in advanced heart failure. By doing so, the investigators will firstly highlight its importance to other clinicians who will better be able to monitor and or diagnose it, and secondly pave way for more research on a potential treatment strategy for this condition.
Gender diverse (e.g. trans or non-binary) young people are at higher risk of self-harm and may be more likely to access support through gender-diverse-specific 3rd sector charities. Dialectical behavioural therapy (DBT) is a transdiagnostic intervention targeting emotion dysregulation, self-harm and suicidality and is recommended by best-practice clinical guidelines; There is developing evidence that DBT skills training can be offered as an effective stand-alone intervention.The current study, therefore, aims to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability and early indicators of effectiveness of a DBT-informed skills group intervention in a gender diverse charity setting. The intervention will be co-facilitated with a gender-diverse support worker from the charity to develop the therapeutic skills of the charity staff working with the young people, whilst they provide specialist knowledge and valuable lived experience. Research questions 1. Is the intervention feasible to deliver in a charity setting? 2. Is the intervention acceptable to participants and charity facilitators? Participants will attend a 16-week group intervention. They will complete questionnaire to assess acceptability at the end of the intervention. Attrition rates, training time, and questionnaires will be used to assess feasibility. Outcome measures will also be completed by the participants every three weeks to indicate possible effectiveness of the intervention. The outcomes will include emotion dysregulation, coping skills, anxiety, depression and suicidal behaviours.
The goal of this clinical study is to gain essential insights into the relationship between Tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy and profound fatigue and abnormal sleep patterns using rest-activity monitoring (actigraphy) and peripheral blood biomarkers in patients with Chronic myeloid leukaemia in chronic phase. The main aims are to 1. Determine the variance of subjective and objective sleep disturbance 2. Determine the difference in serum biomarkers (activin B and L-carnitine) 3. Determine how thes findings concord/discord between treatment and control groups. Participants will asked to undergo 2 weeks of actigraphy monitoring and keep a sleep diary during this time. Blood and urine samples will be taken for analysis. Researchers will compare two groups (patients with fatigue and those without) to assess the differences between groups.
Cholecystectomy is amongst the most common surgical operations performed worldwide. Surgical candidates are treated for biliary pathologies, such as biliary colic, cholecystitis and gallstone pancreatitis. In patients who are deemed fit for surgery, cholecystectomy can be performed under three main settings: (1) emergency setting at index admission; (2) elective setting with no previous admissions; or (3) delayed setting with one or more previous gallbladder-related admissions. The advent of laparoscopy fundamentally evolved biliary surgery and quickly became the "gold standard" approach. Recent multicentre collaborative studies have elucidated that the burden imposed on healthcare systems by laparoscopic cholecystectomies is primarily due to patient readmissions and complications arising from the operation, rather than perioperative mortality burden that was more commonly seen in open surgery. As a result, national and international societies have shifted their focus towards creating a culture of safety around this procedure, with the overarching goal of improving patient satisfaction and reducing hospital costs. The universal establishment of safe cholecystectomy is a complex process that relies not only on the operation itself, but also on various other factors such as promoting adequate training, improving hospital infrastructure, and enhancing perioperative patient care. There remains a paucity of evidence around the variations of safe provision of laparoscopic surgery for gallbladder disease internationally, including low- and middle-income countries. To bridge this knowledge gap, the Global Evaluation of Cholecystectomy Knowledge and Outcomes (GECKO) study (GlobalSurg 4) will be an international collaborative effort, delivered by the GlobalSurg network, that will allow contemporaneous data collection on the quality of cholecystectomies using measures covering infrastructure, care processes and outcomes. It will be disseminated via contacts from the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Global Surgery unit, leading emergency general surgeons and specialist organisations.