Clinical Trials Logo

Filter by:
NCT ID: NCT05741671 Recruiting - Fibroid Uterus Clinical Trials

Sonographic Features of Fibroids Before and During Non-surgical Therapy and/or Expectant Management

MYOVASC
Start date: September 24, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Rationale: 20-30% of women of reproductive age have leiomyomas, causing symptoms like dysmenorrhea and pelvic pain which both effect quality of life.[1-4] The natural behaviour of uterine fibroids is to grow between 7 to 84% in 3 to 12 months.[5-7] Non-surgical options to treat uterine fibroids are non-hormonal or hormonal medical therapies and minimally invasive interventional radiologic techniques. Exogenous hormone exposure including COC, POP or Mirena give in conflicting literature minimal growth to 60% volume shrinkage. [8, 9]] Selective progesterone receptor modulators (SPRM) eg. Esmya and GnRH-analogues intent to reduce fibroids volume after several months; GnRH-agonists provide a 31-63% shrinkage and less frequently applied GnRH-antagonists 14.3 - 42.7%.[10-16] Esmya gives a volume reduction varying between 10 to 48%.[17] Radiological technique like embolization decreases dominant fibroid volume with 40-70%.[1, 18-22] UAE fails in case of devascularized or minimal vascularized fibroids.[23] Ablation techniques show shrinkage up to a maximum of 90% depending e.g. which treatment.[24-41] Clear prognostic models to predict the effect on fibroid related symptoms and volume reduction are lacking. We postulate higher vascularity to be related to 1) larger fibroid growth during the natural course or during exogenous hormonal exposure; 2) more effective shrinkage during progestogens, GnRH-analogues, SPRM and UAE; but 3) less effective after ablation therapy. Objectives: To study the value of sonographic features including vascularity in the prediction of fibroids' volume change at follow-up during their (1) natural course or (2) long-term use of exogenous hormone exposure; after initiation of (3) SPRM or GnRH-analogues treatment or (4) exogenous hormonal exposure; or after (5) embolization or (6) ablation therapy. Study design: Observational cohort study during 5 years in the outpatient clinic. Patientselection: Women ≥18 years with 1 to 3 fibroids with a maximal diameter ≥ 3cm and ≤ 10cm diagnosed on ultrasound examination, planned for expectant or non-surgical management. Study objectives: The primary outcome is volume reduction after 3 to 12 month depending on the study group. The secondary outcome include UFS-QOL, EQ-5D score, PBAC, hemoglobin level, treatment failure rate and (re)intervention rate. Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: No risks are associated with the participation of this observational study since the outcome measures include vaginal ultrasound, questionaires and a hemoglobin test. These measurements are also applied in daily practice, the burden for the patient is time. Extra in the context of the study are questionnaires which last a maximum of 5-15 minutes. The treatment considering the fibroid(s) is independent of this research.

NCT ID: NCT05741476 Recruiting - Allergy, Peanut Clinical Trials

Safety and Efficacy Study of Viaskin Peanut in Peanut-allergic Children 4-7 Years of Age

VITESSE
Start date: February 21, 2023
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The primary purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of daily DBV712 250 micrograms (mcg) to induce desensitization to peanut in peanut-allergic children 4-7 years of age over a 12-month double-blind, placebo-controlled (DBPC) Treatment Period.

NCT ID: NCT05740566 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC)

Study Comparing Tarlatamab With Standard of Care Chemotherapy in Relapsed Small Cell Lung Cancer

DeLLphi-304
Start date: May 31, 2023
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The main objective is to compare the efficacy of tarlatamab with standard of care (SOC) on prolonging overall survival (OS).

NCT ID: NCT05740189 Recruiting - Barrett's Esophagus Clinical Trials

CBAS180 De-escalation Study

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

Evaluate the efficacy and safety of the C2 CryoBalloon 180° Ablatie Systeem (CBAS180) at decremental doses for the treatment of dysplastic Barrett's epithelium.

NCT ID: NCT05740150 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Central Line-associated Bloodstream Infection (CLABSI)

Central Line-associated Bloodstream Infection Prevention Using TauroLock-Hep100 in Pediatric Oncology Patients.

CATERPILLAR
Start date: October 27, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this assessor blinded randomized controlled trial is to compare a lock solution containing taurolidine, citrate and heparin to a heparin only lock solution for the prevention of central line associated bloodstream infections in paediatric oncology patients with a central venous access device.

NCT ID: NCT05739383 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Primary Prevention of Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease

A Study of Inclisiran to Prevent Cardiovascular Events in High-risk Primary Prevention Patients.

Start date: March 9, 2023
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

CKJX839D12302 is a pivotal Phase III study designed to test the hypothesis that treatment with inclisiran sodium 300 milligram (mg) subcutaneous (s.c.) administered on Day 1, Day 90, and every 6 months thereafter in patients at high cardiovascular (CV) risk without a prior major atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) event will significantly reduce the risk of 4-Point-Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events (4P-MACE) defined as a composite of CV death, non-fatal myocardial infarction (MI), non-fatal ischemic stroke, and urgent coronary revascularization, compared to placebo.

NCT ID: NCT05737940 Recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

A Study of AZD3427 in Participants With Heart Failure and Pulmonary Hypertension Group 2

Re-PHIRE
Start date: April 24, 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study is intended to assess the ability of AZD3427 to reduce pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) after 24 weeks of treatment in participants with heart failure (HF) and pulmonary hypertension (PH) Group 2

NCT ID: NCT05737628 Recruiting - Lymphoma Clinical Trials

First-in-human Dose Escalation and Expansion Study With the SIRPα-directed Monoclonal Antibody BYON4228

Start date: March 4, 2024
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is the first-in-human study with BYON4228, a humanized monoclonal antibody (mAb) directed against SIRPα.

NCT ID: NCT05737238 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Acquired Brain Injury

A Single-case Design to Investigate a Compensatory Strategy Game Supporting Goal Management Training

Start date: April 7, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The main cognitive complaint in brain-injured patients is often the everyday disorganization caused by executive function (EF) deficits. In order to minimize the everyday disorganization, effective EF interventions are required. Interventions which incorporate compensatory strategies have the potential to enable patients to minimize disabilities, minimize participation problems and to function more independently in daily life. A well-known evidence-based intervention that incorporates compensatory strategies is Goal Management Training (GMT). GMT entails learning and applying an algorithm, in which a daily task is subdivided into multiple steps to handle executive difficulties of planning, and problem solving. To adopt the GMT strategy and ensure maximal profitability for patients, they have to learn to use the algorithm in different situations and tasks. Therefore, GMT is a comprehensive, time-consuming and thus labour-intensive treatment. Along with this, brain games become increasingly attractive as an (add-on) intervention, most notably in an effort to develop home-based personalized care. Until now, however, the rationale behind brain games is based on what can be considered the restorative approach (i.e. strengthening of executive problems) rather than practicing compensatory strategies, with little or no transfer to improvements in daily life functioning. This study therefore aims to assess the potential of a newly developed Brain Game, based on compensatory strategies, as an add-on to GMT to develop a shortened and partly home-based GMT intervention. The primary objective of this study is to assess whether the use of a compensatory brain game supported GMT treatment could be of interest in people with EF deficits after ABI, to improve goal achievement, their executive function performance during goal-related tasks, and their executive performance during an ecological valid shopping task. The study will be a multiple-baseline across individuals single-case experimental design (SCED). The study population consists of patients referred for outpatient cognitive rehabilitation. Participants eligible for the study must have executive deficits due to Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) of nonprogressive nature (i.e. TBI, stroke), with a minimum time post-onset of 3 months. Age has to be between 18 and 75 and participants have to live independently at home. Executive deficits will be assessed by extensive neuropsychological examination. Participants will be recruited from the outpatient clinic and the department of neurorehabilitation of Klimmendaal and Vogellanden. Four participants will be recruited.

NCT ID: NCT05736822 Recruiting - COVID-19 Clinical Trials

The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Patient in Need of an Intervention

COVID Surg III
Start date: November 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Mixed-method observational study: the impact of pandemic related changes in healthcare on quality of life and experiences with healthcare in Dutch patients undergoing surgery or another intervention during the covid pandemic (2020-2021). Phase 1: qualitative study to gain insight in relevant themes in Patient Reported Experiences Measures (PREMs) by conducting focus groups Phase 2: creating and validating a questionnaire based on themes identified in phase 1 Phase 3: questionnaire study among Dutch patients who underwent an intervention in 2020-2021 using the validated questionnaire of phase 2. The answers will be linked to data from national patients registries in surgery, cardiology, orthopedics and neurology.