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Gastroparesis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03383146 Terminated - Diabetes Mellitus Clinical Trials

A Safety and Efficacy Study of Relamorelin in Diabetic Gastroparesis Study 04

Start date: February 1, 2018
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

A 52-week study to compare the efficacy of relamorelin with that of placebo in participants with diabetic gastroparesis (DG) with respect to the core signs and symptoms of diabetic gastroparesis.

NCT ID: NCT03342157 Terminated - Clinical trials for Diabetic Gastroparesis

Docusate/Senna for the Treatment of Diabetic Gastroparesis

Start date: April 2, 2018
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of the stimulant laxative Senokot-S® for the treatment of diabetic gastroparesis. Senokot-S, and its metabolites, are thought to produce peristalsis, drive intraluminal fluid and electrolyte shifts, and have an irritant effect on the gut mucosa. These complex physiologic mechanisms appear may sufficiently promote stomach emp-tying, and thereby reduce or eliminate the severity of gastroparesis symptoms. In this open label study, participants will be randomized into high and low dose groups to assess for ideal dosing and tolerability. It is the overall goal of this study to select the most promising dose-strength for the treatment of mild through severe gastroparesis.

NCT ID: NCT03285308 Terminated - Diabetes Mellitus Clinical Trials

A Safety and Efficacy Study of Relamorelin in Diabetic Gastroparesis 01

Start date: September 29, 2017
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of relamorelin compared to placebo in participants with diabetic gastroparesis. Participants will report daily severity scores of their diabetic gastroparesis symptoms.

NCT ID: NCT03120325 Terminated - Gastroparesis Clinical Trials

Vagal Nerve Stimulation for Gastroparesis

VNS
Start date: March 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is investigating a new form of treatment for a digestive disorder called gastroparesis. Gastroparesis is thought to be caused by a mix of inflammation and neural dysfunction. The vagal nerve is a large nerve originating from the brain that regulates digestive function. Patients with gastroparesis have what is a called a low vagal tone which results in gastrointestinal motility problems and inflammation; therefore, investigators hypothesize that increasing vagal tone through a hand-held vagal nerve simulator will reduce inflammation and gastrointestinal motility problems in gastroparesis patients. Investigators will evaluate this hypothesis through the use of upper endoscopy testing, breath testing, and blood, stool, urine, heart rate variability, and saliva testing before and after 4 weeks of vagal nerve stimulation (VNS) treatment. There are 6 research visits Visit 1 and visit 2 may take up to 8 weeks (screening/baseline) Visit 3 and visit 4 will take 4 weeks (VNS treatment) visit 5 and 6 will take approximately 4 weeks (VNS followup/washout) Consequently, it is possible that if a patient were to be at the farthest ends of visit windows, they could potentially be in the study for approx 16 weeks. Visit 1 and 2 may be less than 8 weeks which would shorten the patient's overall involvement in the study. The treatment phase of the study will always be 4 weeks with an additional 4 week washout phase. Use of the VNS device takes 4 weeks. Endoscopy and blood work are taken before and after the treatment period.

NCT ID: NCT02164591 Terminated - Gastroparesis Clinical Trials

Escalating Temporary Gastric Electrical Stimulation (GES) for Severe Gastroparesis

TempGES
Start date: February 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to determine the physiologic effects of temporary gastric electrical stimulation in subjects with severe gastroparesis.

NCT ID: NCT02130622 Terminated - Clinical trials for Diabetic Gastroparesis

Study of Promethazine for Treatment of Diabetic Gastroparesis

Start date: July 2014
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Adult diabetic patients (ages 18-65) with gastric emptying scintigraphy-confirmed delayed gastric emptying will be recruited to participate in the study. Using double-blinded methodology, study participants will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment arms: promethazine 12.5 mg three times daily for 28 days or placebo three times daily for 28 days. The primary outcome will be the change in gastroparesis symptom severity, as measured by the Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index (GCSI) at four weeks compared to baseline. Participants will be seen for a clinic evaluation at weeks 0, 2 and 4, during which symptom scores, adverse events and treatment compliance will be assessed. It is hypothesized promethazine treatment will be superior to placebo in improving symptoms of gastroparesis.

NCT ID: NCT02057549 Terminated - Gastroparesis Clinical Trials

Haloperidol vs Conventional Therapy for Gastroparesis

HATGAS
Start date: November 2012
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Randomized controlled trial comparing haloperidol combined with conventional therapy and conventional therapy alone in patients with symptomatic gastroparesis.

NCT ID: NCT02041052 Terminated - Clinical trials for 50 % Reduction of Delayed Gastric Emptying

The Size of the Gastric Remnant as Determinant for Delayed Gastric Emptying After Whipple Resection.

Start date: January 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

A small gastric remnant after whipple resection improves gastric emptying and therefore prevents the development of delayed gastric emptying.

NCT ID: NCT02022826 Terminated - Gastroparesis Clinical Trials

Clinical Management With SPM System and Validation of the SPM 5 Hour Cutoff in Patients With Symptoms of Gastroparesis

Start date: January 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This protocol is designed to validate use of the SPM for diagnosis of delayed gastric emptying in patients with symptoms of gastroparesis and assess impact of a SmartPill study on patient management in the gastroparetic populations. Patients with symptoms of gastroparesis will be recruited. Patients will undergo concurrent gastric scintigraphy and SPM testing to determine the presence or absence of delayed gastric emptying based on predetermined diagnostic cutoffs for each technique.

NCT ID: NCT01934192 Terminated - Gastroparesis Clinical Trials

Nutritional Adequacy Therapeutic Enhancement in the Critically Ill. The NUTRIATE Study

Start date: April 4, 2014
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a multi-center, parallel group, placebo-controlled and active-compared, randomized study to assess the ability of GSK962040 to enhance the delivery of enteral feed to critically ill subjects that are predisposed to developing feeding intolerance (e.g., percentage of goal volume); enhance gastric emptying in this population; and provide preliminary evidence of the drug's effect on outcomes of therapy (length of stay in the Intensive Care Unit [ICU], time on ventilator, ICU acquired infections, and 60-day mortality). Other aims are evaluation of GSK962040 safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics upon repeat dosing in a critically ill population. After meeting eligibility criteria, male and female subjects will be randomized to either receive GSK962040 (50 milligram [mg]) once daily (OD) via naso-gastric (NG) or orogastric (OG) feeding tube (oral solution), or placebo by the same route. If subjects develop intolerance to enteral feeding at any point up to Dose 5 of study medication (inclusive), study treatments will switch such that those originally receiving GSK962040 will receive metoclopramide (10 mg, intravenous [iv], every 6 hours) and those subjects originally randomized to receive placebo will receive GSK962040 (50 mg, via NG, OD). Additionally, if subjects develop intolerance prior to any treatment, they will be randomized to receive either GSK962040 (50 mg, via NG, OD) or metoclopramide (10 mg, iv, every 6 hours). The study will consist of a screening/baseline assessment, a treatment period (up to 7 days in duration), and a 4-day post treatment safety follow-up assessment. The duration of each subject's participation in the study from screening to follow-up safety assessment will be up to approximately 2 weeks. In addition, mortality will be assessed 60 days after admission to the ICU.