There are about 148 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Morocco. 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.
The aim of this study is to investigate the diagnostic accuracy of the C Protein Reactive (CRP) for the detection of Anastomotic leakage after surgery for digestive cancer. The standard protocol in our unit is to measure the CRP on the second and fourth postoperative day. The main aim of the study is to investigate the diagnostic accuracy of the ratio CRP on the fourth postoperative day on CRP on the second postoperative day (CRP_D4/CRP_D2). Secondary outcomes are the diagnosis accuracy of the CRP_D4 and CRP_D2.
This study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of ocrelizumab ( Ocrevus®) compared with placebo in participants with primary progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS), including participants later in their disease course. This study focuses on upper limit disability progression. This study will consist of the following phases: screening, double-blind treatment, follow-up 1 (FU1), an optional open-label extension (OLE), follow-up 2 (FU2), and B-cell monitoring (BCM).
The aim of this multicenter, investigator-initiated, prospective, randomized, open-label, non-inferiority study is to evaluate a prednisone prescribing strategy, guided by eosinophil blood count compared to the standard (systematic) administration of corticosteroids, in patients with COPD exacerbation requiring ventilatory support. Patients fulfilling inclusion criteria and consenting to participate in the study, will be randomized through a random table generated electronically, to eosinophil-guided group or to control group. In the eosinophil-guided group, prednisone (1mg/kg/day for up to 5 days or during the hospital stay if less than 5 days) is administered only if the eosinophil count is >2%. If blood eosinophil count is ≤2%, no corticosteroids are given. In the control group: a treatment based on prednisone at a daily dose of 1 mg/kg will be routinely administered for a maximum of 5 days, or during the hospital stay, if it is less than 5 days. Corticosteroid treatment is taken in the morning in patients with NIV, and through the gastric tube in intubated patients. The hypothesis tested is a non-inferiority of the "eosinophil-guided strategy" compared to the standard strategy, with less exposure to corticosteroids. The primary endpoint is the proportion of unventilated patients at day 6 which is set to 50% in the control group. A pre-specified difference <10% would be a non-inferiority margin. Secondary endpoints are: Number of ICU days alive without ventilatory support within 28 days after recruitment, length of stay in intensive care Unit, the intubation rate in patients initially under NIV, Mortality in the ICU, Hospital mortality. Safety: New onset of diabetes or worsening of diabetes requiring the start or the increase in insulin therapy, Upper gastrointestinal bleeding (2 g drop of Hb requiring blood transfusion or fibroscopy), Uncontrolled hypertensive crisis requiring the introduction of new antihypertensives, ICU-acquired neuromyopathy, Nosocomial infection, Relapse rate / recurrence defined respectively by the rate of a new hospital consultation and/or admission in the week or the month following index hospitalization. Sample size calculation: In a non-inferiority study, with an incidence of the event (no ventilation at D6) of 50% in the control group ( with 10% of acceptable difference for non-inferiority), a power of 80% and alpha error <0.05, it would take 86 patients per arm by anticipating 2% of lost sight.
Actually the methods for melanocyte delivery are invasive and often sophisticated. The dermarolling system with needles causing tiny microinjuries in the epidermis could offer a minimally invasive and painless method of melanocyte transplantation. The purpose of the study is to develop a new and simple method for transepidermally delivering keratinocytes and melanocytes into vitiligo skin.
The Computerized Registry of Patients with Venous Thromboembolism (RIETE) is a multidisciplinary Project initiated in march 2001 and consisting in obtaining an extensive data registry of consecutive patients with venous thromboembolism. The main objective is to provide information on the Internet to help physicians to improve their knowledge on the natural history of thromboembolic disease, particularly in those subgroups of patients who are usually not recruited in randomized clinical trials (pregnant women, elderly patients, disseminated cancer, severe renal insufficiency, patients with contraindications to anticoagulation therapy, extreme body weight, etc), with the purpose of decreasing mortality, frequency of thromboembolic recurrences as well as bleeding complications and arterial events. As an additional objective RIETE is also aimed to create predictive scores that help physicians to better identify patients with high risk of presenting some of these complications. The primary parameters recorded by the registry comprise details of each patient's clinical status, including any coexisting or underlying conditions, and the type, dose, duration and outcome (during the first 3 months of therapy) of antithrombotic treatment. Study endpoints are clinically recognized (and objectively confirmed) recurrences of VTE, major and minor bleeding complications, and death.
This study compares two different field set-ups in patients with breast cancer following a breast resection (mastectomy). These two set-ups are as follows: arm a - radiotherapy to the chest-wall only, and arm b - radiotherapy to the chest-wall and the supraclavicular fossa. Patients in both treatment arms will receive radiotherapy with a shortened fractionation schedule. Study hypothesis: irradiation of the chest-wall only is not inferior to irradiation of the chest-wall and supraclavicular fossa in terms of loco-regional control, survival and treatment toxicity.
Cerebellar ataxias (CA) and spastic paraplegias (SP) are genetically and clinically very heterogeneous. More than 40 loci are already known but the number of phenotypes is even greater suggesting further genetic heterogeneity. These progressive disorders are often severe and fatal, due to the absence of specific therapy. The SPATAX network combines the experience of European clinicians and scientists working on these groups of diseases. Over the past year, they have assembled the largest collection of families and achieved a number of tasks (initiation of a clinical and genetic database, distribution of DNA to participating laboratories, mapping of three new loci, and refinement of several loci). In addition to clinicians from Europe and Mediterranean countries, who play a major role in collecting families according to evaluation tools developed and validated by the SPATAX members, the group includes major European laboratories devoted to the elucidation of the molecular basis of these disorders. Each laboratory will centralize all families with a subtype of autosomal recessive (AR) CA (n=116) or SP (n=207) in order to efficiently map and identify the responsible gene(s). Genome-wide scans are already underway in 61 families. Given the expertise of the participants, the researchers expect to map and identify several genes during the course of this project. The spectrum of mutations and phenotype/genotype correlations will be analysed thanks to this unique series of patients with various phenotypes. The knowledge gained will be immediately applicable to patients in terms of improved positive diagnosis, follow-up and appropriate genetic counselling. In the long term, models for genetic entity will be developed in order to understand the pathophysiology and to identify new targets for treatment. The series of patients assembled and the precise knowledge of natural history will facilitate the implantation of therapeutic trials based on rational approaches.