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NCT ID: NCT05471934 Completed - Hand Eczema Clinical Trials

Satisfaction Survey - Cicaplast Mains

Start date: February 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The participants presenting with hand problems and meeting the inclusion criteria are asked to apply the study product for one month. They are evaluated before and after treatment.

NCT ID: NCT05471297 Completed - Injuries Clinical Trials

Loads, Injuries and Illnesses Among Elite Handball Players

PPDC-2022
Start date: July 20, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Primary goal of the research is to determine whether injury/illness occurrence is influenced by the academic, training and competition loads, as well as the overall load (sum of academic/work, training and competition loads) in elite handball athletes To examine whether subjective measures of perceived overall stress correlate with objectively measured levels of stress. Determine the benefits of certain biomarkers to monitor stress, load and injury/illness occurrence in athletes.

NCT ID: NCT05469581 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Noncommunicable Diseases

"Efficiency of Preventive Interventions in Community Nursing to Improve Medication Adherence in Vulnerable Elderly"

Start date: September 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is to design and investigate the effectiveness of a set of preventive interventions by community nurses in outpatient care in treating vulnerable elderly people to improve the extent to which they follow the agreed recommendations of a doctor or pharmacist regarding taking medication.

NCT ID: NCT05467163 Recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Conduction System Pacing Versus Biventricular Pacing After Atrioventricular Node Ablation

CONDUCT-AF
Start date: July 18, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Atrioventricular node ablation (AVNA) with biventricular (BiV) pacemaker implantation is a feasible treatment option in patients with symptomatic refractory atrial fibrillation and heart failure. However, conduction system pacing (CSP) modalities, including His bundle pacing and left bundle branch pacing, could offer advantages over BiV pacing by providing more physiological activation. The randomized, interventional, multicentric study will explore whether CSP is non-inferior to BiV pacing in echocardiographic and clinical outcomes in heart failure (EF <50%) patients with symptomatic AF and narrow QRS scheduled for AVNA.

NCT ID: NCT05460260 Completed - Clinical trials for Efficacy of a 21-Day Wear Period for the Cascade CGM

Glucomen Day Cascade CGM System 21-Day Wear Study

GLUCODAY21
Start date: September 12, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Assessment of 21-day CGM wear period

NCT ID: NCT05440916 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Non Small Cell Lung Cancer

Palliative RadIotherapy of Multiple Metastatic Sites Before First Line of Systemic Therapy With Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors and Chemotherapy in Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer

PRIMM
Start date: July 14, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The study is designed as a non-randomized Phase 2 clinical intervention study. The study will include patients with disseminated Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma (NSCLC) which are eligible for first line of systemic treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors and platinum-based chemotherapy (PDL1 less than 50%). Patients will receive palliative radiotherapy to multiple sites (2 to 5 sites) prior to systemic treatment. Results of treatment will be compared to historical cohort of patients treated only with systemic therapy.

NCT ID: NCT05438966 Completed - Body Weight Clinical Trials

Nutritional Status of Adult Slovenes After the Covid-19 Epidemic

SloFitCovid
Start date: June 28, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

There is objective need to examine nutritional status (i.e., body mass index (BMI), body composition and dietary intake) of healthy adult Slovenes after SARS-CoV-2 (Covid-19) epidemic period. In the Slovenian (pair of European Union) adult population (with only 2 million inhabitants), we do not yet have representative data on the body composition of adult Slovenes published in the scientific literature. In the study after the Covid-19 pandemic period (4th wave) the investigators will use medically approved body analyzer (Tanita 780 S MA, Tokyo, Japan) and standardized food frequency questionnaire (FFQ). In addition, the investigators will measured body height of the participants with a portable altimeter (ADE MZ10042, Germany). The research will include randomly recruited adults (participants) who will attend various free or/and paid publicly available seminars, congresses and fairs in Slovenia, directly unrelated topics to physical activity or healthy eating (i.e., healthy and active lifestyle) thus obtaining a more realistic current population status.

NCT ID: NCT05432778 Recruiting - CMV Viremia Clinical Trials

Cytomegalovirus Prophylaxis With Letermovir in Heart Transplant Recipients

CYPHER-TXPilot
Start date: May 1, 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

CMV infection is the most prevalent infection after heart transplantation (HTX), occurring in up to 40-60% of the recipients. It most frequently occurs within the first 6 months after transplantation and commonly presents as an asymptomatic viral replication. Viral syndrome or tissue-invasive disease (gastroenteritis, pneumonitis, myocarditis or meningitis) are much less common. Even though CMV infection is generally treatable with virostatic therapy and/or CMV-specific immunoglobulins, direct effects of CMV infection (viral syndrome and tissue-invasive disease) and general and transplant-specific indirect effects of CMV infection have been associated with significant morbidity and mortality in HTX patient population, mainly due to graft loss, development of malignancies, or opportunistic infections. According to the latest consensus paper on CMV prophylaxis and treatment in solid organ transplant recipients, valgancyclovir (or its active form gancyclovir) represents a virostatic therapy of choice for CMV prophylaxis and treatment after HTX. However, valgancyclovir has an array of side effects including hematological (leukopenia, neutropenia, anemia, thrombocytopenia), neurologic (headache, insomnia), gastrointestinal (decreased appetite, diarrhea, vomiting and dyspepsia) and psychiatric (depression) disorders. These can either expose HTX patients to additional complications (e.g. leukopenia and/or neutropenia can result in systemic fungal infections), decrease patients' quality of life, or mandate a decrease in valgancyclovir dose, which exposes patients to an increased risk for CMV reactivation. Recently, letermovir (a novel CMV viral terminase inhibitor), was approved for CMV prophylaxis in allogeneic bone marrow transplant recipients as the placebo-controlled study showed that significantly less patients, treated with letermovir, developed CMV disease (37% vs. 60%; P<0.001) and there was also a trend towards lower all-cause mortality. Data on bone marrow transplant recipients additionally suggest that letermovir is generally well tolerated with side effects limited to mild gastrointestinal symptoms (diarrhea, nausea). Importantly, myelosuppresive side effects of letermovir occur very rarely. Some encouraging data does exist on the use of letermovir in kidney transplant recipients, where a recently published proof-of-concept trial (N=27) suggested comparable safety and efficacy of leteremovir (N=18) and valgancyclovir (N=9): both treatment regimens resulted in similar time-course of viral load reduction and viral clearance and were well tolerated in terms of adverse events. Currently, a Phase III clinical trial is ongoing in renal transplant recipients (Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03443869) to confirm this pilot data. However, to date, there is no published data on the use of letermovir in patients after HTX. Based on the results in kidney transplantation, the aim of this pilot study is thus to evaluate the effects of letermovir-based CMV prophylaxis in heart transplant recipients. The primary objective of the study is to investigate the efficacy of letermovir-based CMV prophylaxis in patients after heart transplantation. The secondary objectives of the study are: - to investigate the tolerability of letermovir-based CMV prophylaxis in patients after heart transplantation. - to explore the potential correlation between letermovir-based CMV prophylaxis and restitution of cell-regulated immunity in patients after heart transplantation.

NCT ID: NCT05430438 Completed - Clinical trials for End Stage Kidney Disease

Effect of Low Versus Standard Dialysate Sodium on 48h Ambulatory BP in Patients With Intradialytic Hypertension

Start date: June 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Intradialytic hypertension (IDH) is a well-recognized and established complication of hemodialysis that affects an estimated 10-15% of the dialysis population and is associated with an increased risk for cardiovascular adverse events and mortality. The major pathogenic mechanisms include volume and sodium overload, endothelial dysfunction and enhanced vasoconstriction potentially through the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) and sympathetic nervous system (SNS) activation. Preliminary uncontrolled studies have demonstrated that in order to achieve proper control of blood pressure (BP) in patients with IDH, volume control with achievement of dry weight, as well as the minimization of sodium load through alteration of dialysate sodium may improve BP. To this day, 3 studies have attempted to evaluate the effect of low dialysate sodium on BP levels in patients with IDH; one study that included 16 patients, compared the effect of low (5 milliequivalent/litre (mEq/L) lower than serum sodium) versus high (5 mEq/L higher than serum sodium) dialysate sodium concentration on BP levels only during the dialysis session; another study examined the effect of low (136 mEq/L) compared to standard (140 mEq/L) sodium dialysate, again, only on peridialytic and intradialytic BP; and only one randomized cross-over study used 24h ABPM to assess the effect of individualized isonatremic vs hyponatremic vs standard dialysate sodium. Hence, the aim of this study is to examine the effect of low (137mEq/L) vs standard (140mEq/L) dialysate sodium on 48h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) in patients with IDH, using appropriate design of randomized crossover study. In addition this is the first study examining the effect of low dialysate sodium on ambulatory central BP, arterial stiffness indices and BP variability in patients with IDH.

NCT ID: NCT05426980 Completed - Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Trials

Artificial Intelligence in Predicting Progression in Multiple Sclerosis Study

AI ProMiS
Start date: December 13, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The study proposal focuses on multiple sclerosis (MS), a chronic incurable disease of the central nervous system (CNS). The MS disease is characterised by recurrent transient disability progression, quantified by increase in the extended disability status score (EDSS), and subsequent remission (disappearance of symptoms and reduced EDSS score) or, alternatively, a gradual EDSS disability progression and exacerbation of associated symptoms. At the same time, the MS is characterised by multifocal inflammatory lesions disseminated throughout the white and grey matter of the CNS, which can be observed and quantified in the magnetic resonance (MR) scans. The proposed study will address the critical unmet need of computer-assisted extraction and assessment of prognostic factors based from an individual patient's brain MR scan, such as lesion count, volume, whole-brain and regional brain atrophy, and atrophied lesion volume, in order to evaluate the capability for personalized future disability progression prediction.