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NCT ID: NCT04473339 Recruiting - Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trials

A Randomized Prospective Trail of HIPEC in Recurrent Ovarian Cancer Patients With HRR Mutation

Start date: August 1, 2020
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

A phase III prospective study with the primary objective to investigate the benefit of Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy (HIPEC) in ovarian cancer patients with mutations in homologous recombination repair (HRR) genes. The target population for this study is patients with recurrent ovarian, peritoneal or fallopian tube cancers undergoing Cytoreductive Surgery (CRS). Patients will be divided into two groups according to HRR genes mutation, each group will be further divided into two sub-groups with different intervention. Patients in Group A are HRR mutated type, sub-group 1 will undergo CRS plus HIPEC and then go on to receive standard platinum-based combination doublet intravenous chemotherapy, sub-group 2 will undergo CRS and then go on to intravenous chemotherapy. Patients in Group B are HRR wild type, sub-group 3 will undergo CRS plus HIPEC and then go on to receive standard platinum-based combination doublet intravenous chemotherapy, sub-group 4 will undergo CRS and then go on to intravenous chemotherapy. All patients will receive maintenance therapy with Niraparib after primary treatment. Prognostic information will be collected for investigation of survival benefits of patients.

NCT ID: NCT04449081 Completed - Septic Shock Clinical Trials

Knowledge, Attitude and Practice of Dental Students About COVID-19

Start date: April 25, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Coronavirus disease 2019 (abbreviated "COVID- 19") is a pandemic respiratory disease that is caused by a novel coronavirus and was first detected in December 2019 in Wuhan, China. The disease is highly infectious, and its main clinical symptoms include fever, dry cough, fatigue, myalgia, and dyspnoea.1 In China, 18.5% of the patients with COVID-19 developed to the severe stage, which is characterized by acute respiratory distress syndrome, septic shock, difficult-to-tackle metabolic acidosis, and bleeding and coagulation dysfunction. After China, COVID-19 spread across the world and many governments implemented unprecedented measures like suspension of public transportation, the closing of public spaces, close management of communities, and isolation and care for infected people and suspected cases. The Malaysian government had enforced Movement Control Order (MCO) from 18th March to 4th May 2020 and henceforth Conditional Movement Control Order (CMCO) until 9th June 2020. The battle against COVID-19 is still continuing in Malaysia and all over the world. Due to the CMO and CMCO in the country, public and private universities have activated the e-learning mode for classes and as the government ordered, universities are closed and no face-to-face activities allowed. This has forced students of all disciplines including dentistry to stay at home which are wide-spread across Malaysia and shift to e- learning mode. To guarantee the final success for fight against COVID-19, regardless of their education status, students' adherence to these control measures are essential, which is largely affected by their knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) towards COVID-19 in accordance with KAP theory. Once the restrictions are eased students have to come back and resume their clinical work in the campus. Hence, in this study we assessed the Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice (KAP) towards COVID-19 and the students preference for online learning.

NCT ID: NCT04431596 Completed - Hyperthermia Clinical Trials

Military Alerting System for Monitoring Body Temperature During Active Cooling

MAMBA
Start date: September 4, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

BHSAI is developing a computational system that provides early alerts of a rise in core body temperature to help reduce the risk of heat injury in the field and during training. The goal of the body temperature alerting system is to use it during rest, exercise in the heat and during body cooling. Using this system during cooling will allow healthcare professionals and military personnel monitor core temperature to ensure cooling is effective (and prevent hypothermia). Therefore, the primary purpose of this investigation is to validate a body temperature alerting system using physiological responses that occur during rest, exercise in the heat and during body cooling. Multiple cooling modalities will be validated. The effectiveness of each cooling modality (passive cooling, mist-fan cooling, hand/forearm immersion) on physiological variables after exercise in the heat will be assessed. Lastly, subject characteristics (demographic and anthropometric characteristics) will be examined to examine their effect on physiological variables during exercise in the heat and during body cooling with each cooling modality.

NCT ID: NCT04422782 Recruiting - Children Clinical Trials

New Tools for Predicting Capillary Leak Shock During Dengue Fever

PrediDengue
Start date: May 14, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Evaluate the prognostic value of different methods (Osmometry / clinical-biological score) compared to the occurrence of capillary leak shock during dengue fever.

NCT ID: NCT04416477 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Yellow Fever Vaccine

Duration of Immunity 10 Years After a Dose-response Study With Yellow Fever Vaccine - Complementary Study

Start date: April 8, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Yellow fever is an acute febrile infectious disease transmitted to man urban cycle by mosquitoes infected by an arbovirus of the genus Flavivirus family Flaviviridae. Its occurrence is recorded in South America Central America and Africa. In cities the yellow fever vector is the Aedes aegypti mosquito which also transmits dengue viruses zika and chikungunya. This disease is more frequent in males and the most affected age group is above fifteen years due to the greater exposure related to the penetration in wild areas of the endemic zone of yellow fever. Another risk group is unvaccinated people who live near wild environments where the virus circulates. According to the World Health Organization a single dose of the yellow fever vaccine is sufficient to maintain protective immunity against yellow fever for a lifetime therefore a booster dose is not required. This question is difficult to evaluate because there is no serological correlate of protection against yellow fever and seropositivity is defined with several cut off points. Although studies indicate that the duration of protection after vaccination is long there is considerable evidence in the literature that antibody titer falls over the years reaching levels considered as seronegative in at least a portion of the vaccinees. This is of more concern to people living in endemic areas who are exposed to the virus throughout their lives. For this reason Brazil recommended revaccinating once at least until additional studies were done. The need to increase Bio Manguinhos production capacity to meet the increased demand from Brazil and other countries is urgent. The occurrence of epidemics when millions of individuals need to be vaccinated in a short period of time exceeds production capacity and this is a recurrent problem. The current vaccine has a very high potency well above the thousand international units recommended by World Health Organization. But we need to generate additional evidence that very low doses of viral particles in the yellow fever vaccine are still immunogenic and that their immunogenicity can be maintained for at least ten years after vaccination. This evidence will support the rapid increase of their availability by the fractionation of doses or other alternatives.

NCT ID: NCT04398095 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Recurrent Soft Tissue Sarcoma

Radiotherapy With Hyperthermia in Recurrent and Radiation-Induced Sarcomas

HOT
Start date: October 23, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

After a screening, which consists of biopsy, physical examination, initial diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI-MRI) or body computed tomography (CT) scan, blood tests and case analysis on Multidisciplinary Team (MDT) meeting, a patient with radiation-induced or in-field recurrent sarcoma will receive the hypofractionated radiotherapy with deep hyperthermia (twice a week) within three weeks. The response analysis in CT or DWI-MRI and toxicity assessment will be performed after 6 weeks. In resectable tumors, a patient will be referred to surgery. In the case of unresectability, the patient will followed-up.

NCT ID: NCT04397380 Not yet recruiting - COVID Clinical Trials

COVID-19 Thales Thermography Triage : Thermal Camera Feasibility Study

COVID3T
Start date: May 20, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study will refine and pilot the feasibility of introducing a thermal imaging test to detect fever in 100 patients being triaged within the Emergency Department. The only additional research requirement for the patient is to have a thermal image of their face taken. Other triage tests will be routine. The aims of the feasibility study are to: - Understand the acceptability of introducing the intervention within the Emergency Department setting - Establish indicative patient recruitment numbers per week - Determine the likely proportion of patients recruited from this group who have a high temperature - Provide preliminary evidence that the technology can identify a high temperature in this diverse group of patients - Provide preliminary data for machine learning training to support classification of patients as being with or without fever The feasibility study will then inform the design and size of larger study to further develop and validate the the thermal imaging screening test to provide a 'with/ without' fever result.

NCT ID: NCT04393909 Completed - Asthma Clinical Trials

Improving Safety of Diagnosis and Therapy in the Inpatient Setting

PSLL2-0
Start date: July 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To improve the safety of diagnosis and therapy for a set of conditions and undifferentiated symptoms for hospitalized patients, the investigators will employ a set of methods and tools from the disciplines of systems engineering, human factors, quality improvement,and data analytics to thoroughly analyze the problem, design and develop potential solutions that leverage existing current technological infrastructure, and implement and evaluate the final interventions. The investigators will engage the interdisciplinary care team and patient (or their caregivers) to ensure treatment trajectories match the anticipated course for working diagnoses (or symptoms), and whether they are in line with patient and clinician expectations. The investigators will use an Interrupted time series (ITS) design to assess impact on diagnostic errors that lead to patient harm. The investigators will perform quantitative and qualitative evaluations using implementation science principles to understand if the interventions worked, and why or why not.

NCT ID: NCT04371003 Withdrawn - Oxidative Stress Clinical Trials

Prospective Investigation of Oxidative Stress in West Nile Virus Infection

PROWENI
Start date: September 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The investigator hypothesizes that oxidative stress responses to West Nile virus infection in the central nervous system determine the severity of infection and the long-term neurological, neuropsychological and functional sequelae of West Nile Neuroinvasive Disease.

NCT ID: NCT04370743 Completed - Fever Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Infrared Cameras and Non-contact Infrared Thermometers for Measuring Body Temperatures

Start date: November 30, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Fever is one of the key symptoms exhibited by contagious patients infected with the Ebola and other viruses. Thermographs and non-contact infrared thermometers (NCITs) are commonly used as early detection tools for screening and isolating sick individuals in healthcare settings and transit centers such as airports. The objective of this clinical study is to evaluate the temperature measurement accuracy of thermographs and NCITs. The study will be accomplished by establishing a protocol based on best practices for screening published in the IEC 80601-2-59:2008 Medical electrical equipment -- Part 2-59: Particular requirements for basic safety and essential performance of screening thermographs for human febrile temperature screening standard, performing initial measurements in patients to optimize clinical procedures, then performing quantitative clinical measurements in febrile and afebrile human subjects to compare thermographs - used in accordance with recognized best practices for measurement - with NCITs for fever screening. Since thermographs and NCITs represent the only currently viable mass screening approaches for infectious disease pandemics, like the recent Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak in West Africa, the study will evaluate these thermal modalities as medical countermeasures for fever-related pandemics and therefore improve response to these diseases.