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.
Dental erosion happens when the teeth lose some of their parts because of acid from the things people eat and/or drink or even from stomach. It can make teeth hurt and become sensitive. The mouth has a protective shield called salivary pellicle that helps, and there are some special bacteria called Nitrate-reducing bacteria (NRB) that can be good for the mouth and heart. Eating some fruits and vegetables or drinking beetroot can make these bacteria thrive, which might help the heart and blood pressure. This study wants to see how administering chlorhexidine mouthwash affects the good bacteria in the mouth for people with healthy teeth and those with erosion. This study aims to find out if this mouthwash can change the saliva and bacteria in the mouth for the better, in people with both healthy teeth and those with dental erosion. The proposed study is part of a PhD educational project and will be a double blind, randomised design, crossover trial for the effect of Chlorhexidine (CHX) mouthwash on healthy control and people with dental erosion (PwDE). This study aims to explore mouthwash's effect on oral microbiome recovery in WMS and salivary pellicle and its impact on blood pressure and arterial stiffness in healthy controls PwDE
This study will provide urine samples from women going through the menopause transition in order to maintain the SPD sample bank. Symptom information and cycle length will also be recorded to observe how these change through the menopause transition.
The primary purpose of the study is to characterise the safety of GSK4024484 in healthy participants within a controlled pharmacokinetic (PK) range.
This is a retrospective cohort study to assess the safety and efficacy of low first dose of Tolvaptan and low or standard second dose of Tolvaptan in patients with moderate to severe hyponatraemia associated with SIADH not responding to conservative means of hyponatraemia management. Patients are treated as part of standard clinical care. There is growing evidence that treating patients with SAIDH induced hyponatraemia using a low dose of Tolvaptan with 7.5mg (below licensed lowest 15mg daily dose). This is the largest study to date and seeks to validate the efficacy and safety or this lower than approved dose of Tolvaptan in patietns who only need a first dose but also in patients who need a second low or srandard dose of Tolvaptan.
The study will utilise focus groups with trained PNAs from different Trusts spread over the Midlands region within England. This approach will help explore the experiences and views of trained PNAs in the application of the role and the foundations on which it is supported. It will also supply valuable feedback regarding the preparation, implementation, and outcome of adopting the PNA position with health care organisations, as there is a suggestion that the role could expand from England to the United Kingdom and possibly the United States of America.
A randomized, Phase 2a, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to evaluate the safety, pharmacokinetics and antiviral activity of multiple doses of orally administered EDP-323 in healthy subjects infected with RSV-A Memphis 37b. This study is designed to assess the antiviral effect of EDP-323 compared to a placebo control in the respiratory syncytial virus challenge model.
The NHS Long Term Plan for Cancer has set out the strategy to deliver personalised care to every patient treated for cancer (1) to improve experience and quality of life for patients. Personalised Follow-Up (PFU) focuses on the tailored needs of patients who have completed cancer treatment and PFU programmes have been established nationally for patients with breast and colorectal cancer. PFU for Head and Neck Cancer (HNC) services will be established nationally by 2024. Currently, there is a lack of evidence that measures prospectively the impact of PFU on patients and providers. In January 2022, Guys and St. Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust initiated PFU for patients with HNC. For the first 2 years following treatment, patients treated curatively are followed up according to institutional protocol. At 2 years following completion of treatment, patients who remain disease free, have no significant risk factors for recurrence and no severe treatment-related toxicity are referred to the programme and discharged from routine oncology FU. Patients are reviewed in a nurse-led HNC PFU clinic where they receive personalised survivorship, health promotion and education in identifying signs of disease recurrence with information on the pathway to re-present directly to the services at Guy's Cancer. This mixed methods research project will evaluate implementation factors of this new PFU programme whilst prospectively measuring its effectiveness. A hybrid type 2 implementation-effectiveness study design will be used to determine the value patients and health care providers (HCP). Semi-structured interviews and focus groups with patients and HCP will be undertaken to evaluate barriers and facilitators, safety, acceptability and user experience. Data will be collected over a 24 month period. All patients who are transferred to the PFU pathway will be eligible to participate, alongside HCP involved in delivering the service.
A cross-sectional retrospective study of a sample of 20 women who completed single agent or multi agent chemotherapy: between 6 weeks and 24 months post treatment involving a semi structured telephone interview. A patient sample of 20 is proposed for the study. These are all the patients who meet the inclusion criteria below and are thus eligible for the study. These patients will be contacted via telephone by the principal investigator to inform them of the study and invite participation. A proposed sample size of 20 is sufficient to generate data to address the central questions and furthermore, this sample size is adequate because the intention is to gain insight into the experiences of patients' perceptions about their psychological experiences. Objectives: - Gaining insight into the emotional impact of GTN post treatment - Ascertaining if health professionals are providing adequate psychological support - Identifying sources of support that patients accessed post completion of treatment - Identifying potential areas of improvement in the follow up support for future patients Criteria for inclusion: - Treated with chemotherapy for a GTN diagnosis - Completed treatment between 6 weeks and 24 months - Are able to provide informed consent - Have no cognitive impairment as judged by the treating clinician Criteria for exclusion - Treatment received less than 6 weeks ago - Treatment received more than 24 months ago - Non-English speaking Outcome measures are not appropriate in this qualitative study. However outputs from this study include increasing knowledge and insight into: - patients' experiences of their psychological experiences post chemotherapy - patients' perspective of the support received after their treatment - potential areas of improvements in care
Oesophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma (OSCC) is a cancer of the food pipe that affects around 2000 patients in the UK every year. It is often detected at an advanced stage, resulting in poor survival (5-year survival less than 20%). Early detection can improve survival (5-year survival >70%). Therefore, early detection is vital to improving survival. There are no national screening guidelines, and an endoscopy (A camera test to look at the food pipe) is the only available test to detect OSCC. Early detection of OSCC is challenging for many reasons. Firstly, early disease symptoms are non-specific, which patients often overlook. Secondly, 'Alarm' symptoms such as weight loss, difficulty swallowing or vomiting blood are signs of advanced stage. Lastly, endoscopy is an invasive test with associated risks and significant discomfort. The investigators propose to develop a breath test for patients with non-specific symptoms. Breath testing has the ideal characteristics for a triage test because it is non-invasive, simple to perform, cost-effective and highly acceptable to patients. The test is based on identifying volatile organic compounds (VOCs, small molecules) that are produced by the cancer and released in breath. The breath test will be offered by General Practitioners (GPs) to patients with non-specific symptoms. Those who test positive will be referred for an urgent camera test, and those who test negative can be reassured.
This is a Phase III, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group study to evaluate the safety, tolerability and the effect of 2 mg Baxdrostat vs. placebo, administered QD orally, on the reduction of SBP, measured by average 24-hour ABPM in 212 participants with rHTN (defined as seated SBP ≥ 140 mmHg at Screening and mean ambulatory SBP ≥ 130 mmHg at baseline, despite a stable regimen of ≥ 3 antihypertensive agents, one of which is a diuretic).