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.
The objective of this study is to understand the effects of HIV cure strategies on the virus and immune cells that reside within the gastrointestinal tract. Subjects receiving therapies with the potential for HIV cure will undergo a colonoscopy to obtain gastrointestinal tissue for research assays. This study will test whether receiving these therapies will induce changes in the immune cells in the gastrointestinal tract and reduce the tissue-associated HIV viral levels.
The purpose of this study is to assess the impact of immersive soundscape on patient pain, stress, anxiety, heart rate and blood pressure during an outpatient vascular surgery procedure.
Sanfilippo syndrome type D is a ultra rare syndrome with limited available natural history data. This study is planned to document, through retrospective and prospective data collection, syndrome progression in children and young adults with Sanfilippo syndrome type D. The results from this study may inform future clinical studies in targeted therapies for patients with Sanfilippo syndrome type D and may serve as an external control since there are very few patients with Sanfilippo syndrome type D.
The RESTORE extension study is a non-interventional, long-term follow-up study with people who participated in the study referred to as RESTORE (NCT05227898). The purpose of this extension study is to understand the durability of the effects of two digital software devices on anxiety and other indicators of psychological and physical health in participants of the RESTORE study in the 6-months after study completion. Subjects who were enrolled and not withdrawn from the original RESTORE study are eligible to participate. People who consent to participate will be asked to electronically complete a set of questionnaires at 3 months and 6 months following the scheduled date of their RESTORE end-of-study visit.
A long-term follow-up study to assess safety and efficacy in patients previously treated with Mustang Bio chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell investigational products.
The investigators are studying the feasibility, safety, and tolerability of administering accelerated repetitive Transcranial magnetic stimulation(a-rTMS) at frequencies other than standard 10 Hz for in-patient Subjects diagnosed with Major Depressive Disorder. Participants will be recruited from the Resnick Neuropsychiatric Hospital. This study will enroll 30 participants who will undergo up to three brain activity recordings, one MRI scan, one TMS procedure to determine the appropriate frequency and intensity for treatment, daily symptom assessments, and 25 TMS treatments. Participants will be asked to participate for up to 2 weeks.
TOL2506A (OVELIA) is a Phase 3, single arm, open-label study evaluating the effectiveness of TOL2506 in suppressing ovarian function in premenopausal women with HR+, HER2-negative breast cancer and men with HR+ breast cancer. The TOL2506A-EXT study described here is a safety extension study to assess and collect long-term data on the ongoing safety and tolerability of TOL2506 in combination with tamoxifen or an AI for up to 4 years.
This study will assess the feasibility and efficacy of our Virtual Reality Pain Alleviation Therapy (VR-PAT) for pain management during pediatric and young adult outpatient laser procedures and evaluate the impact of VR use on reducing anxiety in patients undergoing dermatologic laser procedures. The investigators hypothesize that patients using VR-PAT will report less pain and anxiety during the laser procedure than patients who do not play the game.
Microdosing induction is a novel method of starting buprenorphine/naloxone without patients experiencing the opioid withdrawal that is a part of traditional induction. Patients take small doses of buprenorphine/naloxone that increase slowly over a week. Although microdosing induction has been supported anecdotally, its effectiveness is not known. The proposed study will compare the effectiveness and safety of two induction strategies for transitioning patients from opioids to buprenorphine/naloxone. All inductions will occur in an outpatient telehealth opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment setting. The study will compare patients who receive traditional induction versus microdosing induction. Primary outcomes include effectiveness and safety. Secondary outcomes include treatment retention, self-reported use of opioids during induction, return to opioid use, opioid appearance in drug screens, craving/withdrawal symptoms, and patient satisfaction.
The purpose of this study is to sustain regular physical activity, improve health-related quality of life, improve resting blood pressure, improve anthropometrics, and improve adherence to prescribed cardiac rehabilitation sessions among individuals referred for cardiac rehabilitation (CR). Numerous studies show that CR improves clinical outcomes in cardiovascular disease (CVD). Exercise as a reliable adjunctive intervention, however, remains limited due to poor short- and long-term adherence. This proposed study will examine the effectiveness of the Kura Care KardioPac digital application plus CR to significantly sustain exercise adherence among CR patients, as compared to standard of care alone.