Clinical Trials Logo

Filter by:
NCT ID: NCT06376968 Recruiting - Renal Dialysis Clinical Trials

Prospective, Multicentre, Randomized, Controlled, Cross-over Study on the Safety and Performance of the Biologic Fusion Option of DialogiQ Compared to Haemodialysis Without Biologic Fusion in Hypotension Prone Patients on Maintenance Haemodialysis

Start date: April 22, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this prospective, randomized, controlled, cross-over, multicentric study is to demonstrate the safety of bioLogic Fusion in patients on chronic haemodialysis or hemodiafiltration prone to hypotensive episodes. The main question it aims to answer is: • Which is the number and percentage of individual sessions with reached prescribed post-dialysis body weight in the prescribed treatment time in each single session in hypotensive-prone patients on high-flux haemodialysis or hemodiafiltration within each patient with treatments performed with DialogiQ with (treatment A) or without (treatment B) the bioLogic Fusion option activated? Participants will in addition to their routine dialysis treatment undergo 2 physical examinations and regularly answer questionnaires. A crossover design is used to compare treatments with or without the BioLogic Fusion function activated.

NCT ID: NCT06375941 Recruiting - Angiosarcoma Clinical Trials

Prospective Observational Study of Localized Angiosarcoma of Any Site: ProStars

ProStars
Start date: March 29, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study will be a multi-institutional, prospective, observational study of patients with localized primary AS of any site within ISG and RTR centers. Patients will be treated according to clinical practice of the center and according to ISG clinical recommendations on localized AS.

NCT ID: NCT06375915 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma

Precision Medicine in Patients With Unresectable CholAngiocarcinoma: RadioEmbolization and Combined Biological Therapy

PM-CARE
Start date: May 1, 2024
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Underlying disease mechanisms are fundamental for correct treatment selection and patient management in highly invasive and debilitating non-transmissible diseases. Even though overall disease burden of cancer may have decreased due to a higher degree of awareness, the availability of high-quality healthcare and early diagnosis may become challenging in certain neoplasms. Cholangiocarcinoma is usually diagnosed at advanced stages due to non-specific presentation and is frequently refractory to chemotherapy, causing a massive impact on patients and their families. Surgery is currently the only curative treatment but is available to only approximately 30% of patients. The combination of interventional- and immune-oncology to standard of care creates the perfect substrate for synergistic mechanisms to fight tumor growth; in situ cell death following transarterial embolization(TARE) elicits immune mediated response, inflammatory response and biomarkers of oxidative stress and increases antigen presenting T-cells which an anti-anti progam death ligand (PD-L)1 can bind to; standard of care can then add on with its known effects.The rationale of a combined- locoregional and systemic - treatment lies in the synergistic effects of each of the treatments.

NCT ID: NCT06375057 Recruiting - Post Operative Pain Clinical Trials

Relationship Between Acute Phase Markers and Post-operative Pain in Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy: An Observational Study

Start date: March 3, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Many patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy are prone to developing acute and chronic post-operative pain. The aim of the study is to show a possible correlation between pain and acute phase proteins in order to: - predict the severity of pain; - select most suitable pain relief therapy for the patient.

NCT ID: NCT06374628 Recruiting - Breast Cancer Clinical Trials

Pre-pectoral Tissue Expander and Acellular Dermal Matrix for a Two-stage Muscle Sparing Breast Reconstruction

Start date: June 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The aim of the research is to evaluate clinical outcomes of a two stage muscle sparing prepectoral breast reconstruction using tissue expander (TE) entirely covered by an ADM. The authors aim to report surgical indications, technical tips, clinical and histological outcomes with the final objective of delineate a decision-making algorithm for immediate prosthetic breast reconstruction.

NCT ID: NCT06374615 Recruiting - Tick-Borne Diseases Clinical Trials

Insights Into Tick-Borne Diseases: a Study From an Endemic Area of Northern Italy

TICKTOC
Start date: March 25, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a monocentric, experimental, non-pharmacological and non-device no profit study. The study is experimental because all the visits and blood withdrawals foreseen by the protocol do not fall within the normal clinical practice.

NCT ID: NCT06374433 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Human Brain and Cognition

Investigating the Plasticity of Human Predictive Coding Through Neuromodulation

PREDICOM
Start date: June 13, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The hypothesis of the study is to investigate how different trm (tES) methods (transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation, tACS, and transcranial Random Noise Stimulation, tRNS) applied at different stimulation frequencies and networks can modulate the predictive mechanisms in human perception and cognition. This is an interventional, monocentric, cross-sectional randomized, single-blinded study on healthy adult volunteers, recruited through online advertisements, flyers and oral transmission. Volunteers will be recruited from the general population of young adults.

NCT ID: NCT06373003 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Antiphospholipid Syndrome

Negative Antiphospholipid Syndrome: a Multicentric Study

Start date: March 31, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Multicentre no-profit, national, (cross-sectional diagnostic) retrospective study, promoted by the Italian Society for Rheumatology. The main objective of the study is to assess the diagnostic accuracy of non-criteria aPL (anti-vimentin/cardiolipin and anti-phosphatidylserine/prothrombin) in identifying APS in patients with thrombosis/recurrent adverse pregnancy outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT06372990 Recruiting - HBV Clinical Trials

Rapid T-cell Analysis Test in Patients With Chronic HBV and HBV/HDV Disease

BDTc
Start date: April 15, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Prospective, non-pharmacological, single-center, non-profit observational study. The study design allows longitudinal evaluation of the immune response during the natural history of the infection and/or treatment, correlating the data with the outcome of the disease and antiviral therapies, which will be collected as study variables from the source documents. The study population will be patients suffering from chronic HBV infection with or without HBV-HDV co-infection followed at the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology of Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico. The present study is part of an international cooperation project between the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico (Milan, Italy) and the Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore, financed by a grant (project MAECI-2023-23683653) and divided into two specific Work Packages: - WP 1 Milan team (WP1.1 - Clinical and virological phenotyping of CHB and CHD patients; WP1.2 - Clinical evaluation of rapid HBV T cell test in CHB and CHD populations) - WP 2 Singapore team (WP2.1 - Applicability of the rapid T cell assay approach; WP 2.2 - Optimization of the rapid T cell assay protocol) The primary objective of the study is to define the prevalence of specific T cell responses in patients with chronic HBV and HBV-HDV infection, through the application of a specific rapid T cell assay.

NCT ID: NCT06372587 Recruiting - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Next-Generation alzheImer'S Therapeutics

ENERGISE
Start date: December 19, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Is this the right time to use next-generation approaches in Alzheimer's disease (AD)? In recent years, several large clinical trials testing treatments for AD have failed, putting the entire field on a reset. AD drug trials have almost exclusively sought to use antibodies targeted toward misfolded amyloid and tau proteins. Of note, although these approaches have failed, they were designed to cover both familial and sporadic forms of AD. On the other hand, the failure in developing new effective drugs is attributed to, but not limited to, the highly heterogeneous nature of AD with multiple underlying hypotheses and multifactorial pathology. The idea underlying this project is based on the assumption that learning and memory disorders can arise when the connections between neurons do not change appropriately in response to experience. Thus, by intervening on the core mechanisms of the cellular correlate of learning and memory, i.e., synaptic plasticity, the investigators expect to preserve some of the essential brain functions in AD. By overcoming the limits of traditional AD therapeutic approaches, the investigators will use genetically encoded engineered proteins (GEEPs), which the investigators developed and tested in vitro and in murine models, to control their activity in living human neurons boosting synaptic plasticity. Indeed, outstanding and relevant progress in understanding synaptic physiology empowers the possibility to prevent or limit brain disease like never before. The investigators designed GEEPs to address some of the leading causes of synaptic plasticity failures documented in AD. Thus, GEEPs will be tested in human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs)-derived living neurons obtained from reprogrammed peripheral tissues of participants with Alzheimer's diseases. hiPSCs will be obtained from fibroblast-derived from a skin biopsy of participants with AD and controls performed in local anesthesia using a 4 mm punch. The findings will provide the first preclinical study on the effect of genetically engineered proteins to control essential pathways implicated in synaptic plasticity on AD-related cognitive decline.