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NCT ID: NCT06316219 Completed - Clinical trials for Endometrial Diseases

The Use of Nomegestrol Acetate/Estradiol in Random Start Rapid Endometrial Preparation

Start date: January 1, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The presence of a thin endometrium plays an important role in enabling the best conditions for hysteroscopic surgery. Recently, for this purpose, many studies have evaluated the effect of preoperative administration of a variety of drugs. We explored the efficacy of random started 14-day administration of Nomegestrol Acetate/Estradiol, in rapid preparation of endometrium for hysteroscopic polypectomy.

NCT ID: NCT06316206 Completed - Clinical trials for Endometrial Diseases

The Use of Ethinylestradiol/Dienogest in Random Start Rapid Endometrial Preparation

Start date: January 1, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The presence of a thin endometrium plays an important role in enabling the best conditions for hysteroscopic surgery. Recently, for this purpose, many studies have evaluated the effect of preoperative administration of a variety of drugs. We explored the efficacy of random started 14-day administration of Ethinylestradiol/Dienogest, in rapid preparation of endometrium for hysteroscopic polypectomy.

NCT ID: NCT06316193 Not yet recruiting - Stress Clinical Trials

The Use of the Diary in Neonatal Pathology: a Mixed-method Study for Collecting and Analyzing the Experience of Parents and Health Care Personnel.

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

The study is mixed-methods (qualitative + quantitative observational cross-sectional) and the aims are to explore the use of diaries by parents of newborns admitted to Neonatal Pathology and to describe some variables related to their experience during their children's hospitalization, such as: stress level, postpartum depression and perceived support. The diary that will be analyzed is already part of current clinical practice. Study population: - Parents of premature infants with gestational age less than or equal to 35 weeks and infants with birth weight less than or equal to 2kg admitted to Neonatal Pathology of San Raffaele Hospital. - Health workers of the O.U. of Neonatal Pathology.

NCT ID: NCT06316180 Completed - Clinical trials for Endometrial Diseases

The Use of Drospirenone/Estetrol in Random Start Rapid Endometrial Preparation

Start date: January 1, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The presence of a thin endometrium plays an important role in enabling the best conditions for hysteroscopic surgery. Recently, for this purpose, many studies have evaluated the effect of preoperative administration of a variety of drugs. We explored the efficacy of random started 14-day administration of drospirenone/estetrol, in rapid preparation of endometrium for hysteroscopic polypectomy.

NCT ID: NCT06316128 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Coronary Syndrome

EmploYEd Antithrombotic Therapies in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndromes HOspitalized in iTalian CCUs

EYESHOT-2
Start date: February 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This registry has the aim to assess the use of different antithrombotic therapies, including untested drug combinations, routinely used during the hospitalization phase, with their timing, route and dose of administration, in consecutive patients discharged with a diagnosis NSTEMI or STEMI in Italian Cardiac care Units (CCUs) during a four-week study period.

NCT ID: NCT06315868 Recruiting - Breast Cancer Clinical Trials

Breast Cancer Subtype Characterization Through Patient's Derived Organoids.

BCinsightPDO
Start date: June 15, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Development of tools to predict patients chemo-sensitivity and identification of corresponding biomarkers is an urgent challenge for BC patients lacking targeted therapies, such as TNBC, or for patients experiencing relapse after adjuvant chemotherapy or targeted therapies. The refinement of 3D-cultivation techniques, experienced in the last decade, has allowed cultivation of patients-derived cancer cells in organotypic structures, named patient-derived organoids (PDO), which preserve histologic, genomic and transcriptomic features of primary tumors. PDO allow propagation, pharmacological treatment and genetic manipulation of patients-derived cancer cells in a close to physiology setting, thus representing a promising tool in the development of personalized therapies

NCT ID: NCT06315439 Completed - Clinical trials for Pancreas Adenocarcinoma

Digital Confocal Microscopy for Real-time Diagnosis of Pancreatic Solid Lesion

Multi-RELAMI
Start date: January 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Endoscopic ultrasound-guided (EUS) tissue acquisition is the current standard of care for the diagnosis of pancreatic solid lesions but it is burdened by a non-negligible risk of non-diagnostic or inconclusive results. Ex-vivo fluorescence confocal laser microscopy (FCM) with MAVIG VivaScope® 2500M-G4 could allow real time assessment of adequacy and diagnosis of the sample.

NCT ID: NCT06315361 Active, not recruiting - Diabetes Clinical Trials

DIAbetes and NAFLD

DIANA
Start date: May 20, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Non-alcoholic hepatic steatosis (NAFLD) is characterised by the excessive accumulation of triglycerides in the liver and is often associated, in the absence of significant alcohol consumption, with insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome with which it shares the most frequent clinical manifestations (hypertension, dyslipidaemia, visceral adiposity, glucose intolerance). Due to the pandemic spread of obesity and diabetes and by virtue of better control of viral hepatitis, NAFLD is the most common cause of liver damage in Western countries with a prevalence of around 20-30% of the general population. The clinical impact of NAFLD in diabetes is considerable and represents a real driver of the major clinical outcomes that impact on the health of the individual, consequently creating a real 'burden of disease' especially in those populations considered to be at higher risk of disease severity. Individuals with diabetes are, in fact, those at greatest risk of developing the clinical sequelae of NAFLD and often do not receive adequate hepatological support and a correct hepatic pathology. In fact, it has been documented in the literature that the presence of diabetes increases the severity of liver damage, bringing the risk of NASH up to 80% and increasing the risk of significant fibrosis to 30-40% of subjects with hepatic steatosis as well as representing an independent predictor for significant fibrosis. Lastly, the increased risk of hepatocarcinoma in subjects with diabetes and NAFLD should not be overlooked, as documented by our group and confirmed in a large Italian case series. In subjects with diabetes, moreover, the presence of NAFLD is not only associated with worse glycaemic control, but also with micro- and macro-vascular complications as well as nephrological and neuropathic complications and increased mortality. Therefore, the possibility of applying the non-invasive fibrosis scores currently available for NAFLD on a large scale, in a population at high risk of progressive liver disease, would make it possible to characterise (a) the true epidemiology of significant fibrosis (F3 or higher); (b) allow primary prevention actions to be carried out by optimising the use of resources or by identifying subjects at greater risk of damage progression; (c) understand, in cases with a long history of disease the true prevalence of clinical outcomes; (d) understand the epidemiology of comorbidities and polypharmacy as a function of significant fibrosis.

NCT ID: NCT06314997 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Recurrence Free Survival

Dynamic Changes in Circulating Tumour Cells Protein Expression

Liquid-DRER2
Start date: January 14, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This multicenter study, randomized, controlled of blood-based biomarker-driven targhet therapy. Patients were selectedm( at Hospital San Giovanni and Celio in Rome) according to CTCs results ( CTCs-guided managment performed at University Magna Graecia) or managed by the treating clinician according to standard pathological criteria (standard management). The participants were assigned to trial groups with the use of block randomization stratified according to the enrolling center location metropolitan) and tumor stage (T3 or T4).

NCT ID: NCT06314932 Not yet recruiting - Overweight Clinical Trials

Role of Ultra-processed Foods in Modulating the Effect of Mediterranean Diet

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

Mediterranean diet is worldwide promoted as one of the healthiest and most sustainable dietary patterns. One of the main pillars of Mediterranean diet is the abundant consumption of plant-based ingredients typically consumed as raw or minimally processed. However, even in the Mediterranean countries, these fresh foods are increasingly replaced by ultra-processed foods (UPF). Epidemiological evidence suggests that consumption of UPF may be detrimental to human health, but there is only one clinical trial on this topic which is largely debated in the scientific community due to limitations related to the short duration of the trial and the composition of dietary interventions. The present study aims at exploring whether the inclusion of UPF within a Mediterranean-based dietary pattern can impact on cardiometabolic markers, gut microbiota and other health markers in a dietary intervention performed in Italian subjects. For this purpose, 50 clinically healthy subjects will be recruited for a 7-month randomized, open, cross-over dietary trial. Eligible participants will be randomly assigned to consume a 3-month Mediterranean diet high in UPF (intervention group) or a low-UPF Mediterranean diet (control group), spaced by a 1-month wash-out period. The two diets will have the same composition in terms of food groups. However, in the high-UPF Mediterranean diet group, 5 servings/day of UPF, as defined by the NOVA system, will be consumed (e.g., flavored yogurt, breakfast cereals with added sugar, processed meat). In the control group, these foods will be replaced by products from the same food group, but not UPF (e.g., plain yogurt, breakfast cereals with no added sugar, unprocessed meat). The inflammatory potential of pairs of food products, both UPF and non UPF, will be evaluated using an in vitro cell model testing the modulation of inflammatory markers. Before and after each intervention blood, urine and fecal samples will be collected. The primary endpoint is change in low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels from baseline. Among the other markers, blood pressure and anthropometric parameters will be measured; biochemical parameters, adipokines, inflammatory and oxidative stress markers, fecal microbiota composition and short chain fatty acids (SCFAs) will be analyzed. Adherence to the study, dietary intake and food waste production will be evaluated through specific food diaries, useful also for estimating the metabolic food waste.