There are about 173942 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in United States. 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.
This Expanded Access IND is to evaluate the safety of multiple intravenous administrations of HB-adMSCs for treating Parkinson's disease in 10 patients between 76 and 95 y/o who do not qualify for other investigations.The dose to use for this expanded access is 200 million HB-adMSCs, administered through intravenous infusion only, with a treatment duration of 18 weeks. The program includes an up to 28 days screening period, an 18-week Treatment Period, and a 6-week Safety Follow-up Period.
This is an Individual Patient Expanded Access IND providing multiple administrations of HBadMSCs for the treatment of Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain. The study duration is approximately 32 weeks, during that time the study subject will complete 1 screening visit, 6 infusion visits, one follow-up visit without infusion and one end of study visit. Next day telephone follow-up visits will occur following each infusion. Efficacy and safety labs as well as quality of life and VAS scores will be obtained.
Expanded Access for treatment with investigational product MSC-NTF cells(NurOwn®) for participants who completed all scheduled treatments and follow-up assessments in the BCT-002-US study
The primary objective of this study is to provide expanded access to and characterize the safety profile of Sotorasib in participants with previously treated locally advanced/unresectable/metastatic non small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with KRAS p.G12C mutation in a real-world setting.
This expanded access use program will provide a botanical drug of T89 for treatment use in an intermediate-size population infected with SARS-CoV-2 who have severe COVID-19, or who are judged by a healthcare provider to be at high risk of progression to severe or life-threatening condition.
This is an expanded access program (EAP) for eligible participants designed to provide access to Marizomib.
This is an Individual Patient Expanded Access IND of autologous adipose derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells with the primary goal of treating 1 individual with bilateral knee pain who has exhausted all treatment options, his condition has not improved, and his quality of life is severely affected by the condition. There are no FDA approved, fully restorative treatments for his condition. The subject will receive 2 autologous HB-adMSCs intravenous infusion of 200 million (2 x 10^8 cells) total cells, and 4 autologous HB-adMSCs intra-articular injections (1 in each knee joint/ intervention).
This is an open-label, single-arm, non-randomized, intermediate-sized expanded access study evaluating the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of PVSRIPO delivered via intratumoral infusion, in subjects with glioblastoma (GBM) who are ineligible to participate in clinical study with PVSRIPO that is currently open to enrollment.
This is an open-label, expanded access study of exebacase used in addition to antistaphylococcal antibiotics in adult patients with persistent methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bloodstream infections (BSI), including right-sided endocarditis (R-IE), who are hospitalized with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Patients with left-sided endocarditis (L-IE) are excluded. Patients will receive a single dose of exebacase. Patients will continue to receive antistaphylococcal antibiotics as prescribed by the treating physician. Exebacase Phase 3 study sites (Study CF-301-105) may participate in this Expanded Access study (Study CF-301-107). Exebacase, a direct lytic agent, is an entirely new treatment modality against S. aureus. Exebacase is a recombinantly-produced, purified cell wall hydrolase enzyme that results in rapid bacteriolysis, potent biofilm eradication, synergy with antibiotics, low propensity for resistance, and the potential to suppress antibiotic resistance when used together with antibiotics. Exebacase represents a first-in-field, first-in-class treatment with the potential to improve clinical outcome when used in addition to standard-of-care antibiotics to treat S. aureus BSI including IE.
The expanded access program allows people to gain access to an unlicensed treatment on compassionate grounds. Lanadelumab, also known as TAK-743, is a medicine to help prevent angioedema attacks. This expanded access program enables these participants with a high unmet medical need to continue receiving lanadelumab during the interim period between completion of either the SHP643-301 (NCT04070326; SPRING study) or the TAK-743-3001 (NCT04444895) study and potential licensure of lanadelumab for the respective age group and/or treatment.