There are about 8563 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Sweden. 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.
Medtronic is sponsoring Enlighten: The EV-ICD Post Approval Registry, to further confirm safety and effectiveness of EV-ICD in routine clinical practice, following commercial release of EV-ICD devices.
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if a new drug that might help protect and preserve kidney function in antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA) associated vasculitis (AAV). AAV is a type of autoimmune disease where the body's own immune system attacks itself, and in the case of AAV the body attacks its own small blood vessels. There are many small blood vessels in the kidneys meaning the kidneys are commonly affected in AAV. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Is the new drug well tolerated and safe? - Can the new drug protect and preserve kidney functions when is added to standard therapy? Researchers will compare the following groups to see how the new drug is tolerated and what effect to preserve kidney tissue has: - Group A: Standard treatment + ALE.F02 low dose infusions - Group B: Standard treatment + ALE.F02 high dose infusions - Group C: Standard treatment + ALE.F02 maximum dose infusions - Group D: Standard treatment + placebo infusions (inactive substance) The Treatment period will consist of 24 weeks beginning on Day 1, during which time participants will receive 13 infusions of the study medicine, along with standard therapy for kidney inflammation due to AAV. During the treatment period, participants will have the following assessments: - A brief physical examination focusing on their skin any pre-existing medical conditions that you have. - Collection of blood and urine samples for routine safety tests and to assess renal function. - Collection of blood samples: - To measure the amount of study medicine in their blood. This is called pharmacokinetics (PK) and it is tested to see how study medicine enters, moves through, and exits the body. - To test for antidrug antibodies (ADA). To check if their body create antibodies against the study medicine, as this could reduce its effect. - To measure biomarkers. Biomarkers are specific compounds in the body (can be protein, hormones, or genetic molecules) that indicate normal or abnormal processes taking place in your body and may be a sign of an underlying condition or disease (for example glucose levels are used as biomarker in managing diabetes). They are used to see how well the body responds to a treatment for a disease or condition. - Collection of urine to measure urine markers of vasculitis/inflammation called biomarkers. - Urine pregnancy test. A urine pregnancy test is a quick medical test that can tell if a woman is pregnant or not by checking for a hormone which is produced during pregnancy, usually in the urine. - Chest High Resolution Computed Tomography (HRCT) scan to check whether they have vasculitis affecting their lungs. A CT scan uses special x-ray equipment to take detailed pictures of body tissues and organs to diagnose and monitor conditions in various parts of the body. For the CT scan, they will need to lie still on a table. At Week 24 a second lung CT scan will be performed for participants whose initial scan showed lung vasculitis to see whether your lung vasculitis is getting better or ongoing/worse.
The purpose of this Randomized Controlled Trial is to develop and evaluate a digi-physical intervention within primary health care lactation counselling and breastfeeding support to promote exclusive breastfeeding rates during the first 6 months after birth and to prevent depressive symptoms. The project addresses parents during pregnancy week 20 and 32 and will continue during the infant's first year of life. All participants will get access to an evidence-based information package (theory and practical advises) during pregnancy. Study aim is to develop and evaluate digital evidence-based information materials and continuous support for both parents in order to increase prevalence of exclusive breastfeeding and duration as well as decreasing the risks of symptoms of post-partum depression.
IMPORTANT study is a multicenter, open-label, prospective, randomized-controlled, non-inferiority trial with a pragmatic approach involving older patients (≥ 70 years old) with advanced hormone receptor (HR)-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative breast cancer, not amenable for curative treatment and without prior therapy for advanced disease, who are suitable to receive CDK 4/6-inhibitors plus endocrine therapy as first line therapy. The study implements two approaches with high level of evidence, namely the use of comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) approach in treatment decision making and the use of CDK 4/6-inhibitors as the initial treatment of choice, to investigate whether a common clinical practice (starting dose reduction of CDK 4/6-inhibitors in older patients) with evidence of low certainty can be standardized using a more individualized-based approach. On the basis of baseline CGA assessment, patients will either receive full dose of CDK 4/6-inhibitors plus endocrine therapy (if patients are fit according to CGA) or be randomized to full dose vs. reduced initial dose of CDK 4/6-inhibitors (if vulnerable or frail according to CGA). The study hypothesis is that adjusting the dose according to vulnerability will allow patients to tolerate treatment better without jeopardizing the treatment efficacy. This project has received funding from the European Union's HORIZON 2022 research and innovation actions supporting the implementation of the Mission on Cancer under grant agreement No 101104589.
The PROP(ofol)-study (EU CT number: 2022-502292-39-00, protocol number: ) is a clinical trial phase IV single centre prospective randomized controlled trial with parallel groups. A total of 80 women who undergoes examination and repair of obstetric perineal lacerations (grade I and II) are randomized into two arms (1:1); analgesia with pudendal nerve block (PNB) with ropivacaine (clinical routine, control group), or analgesia with PNB in combination with patient-controlled sedation with propofol (PCS, PCS group). The hypothesis is that PNB in combination with PCS improves patient experienced pain/discomfort during the examination and repair of the perineal laceration. The primary endpoint is patient experienced pain/discomfort. Secondary endpoints are time of repairing the perineal laceration, ability to have skin-to-skin contact with the baby during perineal repair, time until micturition after the perineal repair, procedure feasibility, amount of drugs used during perineal repair, and use of pain relief 24h postpartum. The study is planned to start during the second half of 2023 and end during the first half of 2024.
Rationale: Preterm neonates with low platelet counts receive prophylactic platelet transfusions with the aim to prevent bleeding. However, it is not clear in which cases platelet transfusions reduce the risk of bleeding or whether they do more harm than good. A large, randomized trial showed that the higher platelet count threshold for transfusion was associated with a higher rate of death and major bleeding, which suggests that platelet transfusions caused harm in neonates. To gain insight into the risk/benefits of platelet transfusions, the investigators will validate a recently developed dynamic prediction model for major bleeding in multiple NICUs in Europe and investigate the effects of prophylactic platelet transfusions on the risks of bleeding and potential transfusion-associated adverse events. This model could then be used in future studies to define enhanced indications for transfusion, with the ultimate goal to prevent transfusion-associated harm in this vulnerable population. Objectives: 1. Validation of the existing dynamic prediction model in an international cohort of preterm neonates with severe thrombocytopenia (platelet count <50x10^9/L) admitted to a NICU. 2. Model amendment to enable prediction of bleeding risks under various hypothetical platelet transfusion strategies in preterm neonates with severe thrombocytopenia. 3. To examine whether prophylactic platelet transfusions are causally associated with the occurrence of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), proven sepsis, retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), major bleeding, and mortality. Study design: Multicenter international retrospective cohort study. Study population: Neonates with a gestational age <34 weeks and a platelet count <50x10^9/L, admitted to a NICU between January 1st 2017 and January 1st 2022. Main study endpoints: Major bleeding, BPD, NEC, proven sepsis, ROP and mortality. Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit, and group relatedness: Not applicable, as this is a retrospective study.
The primary aim of the project is to map fatigue, cognitive and visual dysfunctions and possible underlying pathophysiological mechanisms in persons with long-term symptoms after a mild to moderate COVID-19 infection. Secondary goals are to study whether covarying factors such as depression and sleep disorders contribute to the results.
Patients in the Intensive Care Unit often present with low levels of plasma sodium and are therefore often administered high amounts of sodium, both as an additive to intravenous glucose solutions and as a constituent of various drugs and infusion fluids. Recent findings question the benefit of these large quantities of sodium and raise the question whether the individual physician takes the total sodium administration into account when sodium additives are prescribed. It can also be suspected that sodium prescription differs significantly between physicians.
This study addresses nursing acuity measures within somatic in-patient care. Quantitative and qualitative analyses will be used in order to examine staffing levels and nurses' perception of work environment, before, during and after the implementation of a patient acuity tool as a part of daily management.
For children, adequate perioperative pain management is a right according to the UN convention on the rights of the child, a law in Sweden since 2020. Despite this, children are still under-treated in many cases. In addition to great suffering, this can lead to missing school and a long-term burden on the society. ESPA, the European Society for Pediatric Anesthesia, has drawn up guidelines for perioperative pain management. With the study 4P: Persistent Postoperative Pediatric Pain, we want to investigate whether these guidelines are followed and how many children develop long-term pain postoperatively. In order to map the prevalence of pain after surgery in children in Sweden, the investigators plan to include and follow 2000 children in southern Sweden who undergo surgery. The study provides a unique opportunity to follow a large number of children, evaluate given per- and postoperative pain treatment and identify factors linked to the development of acute and long-term postoperative pain. Our goal is to optimize peri- and postoperative pediatric pain management to promote rapid recovery after surgery.