View clinical trials related to Healthy Participants.
Filter by:This study is being conducted to assess the Mass Balance, Pharmacokinetics, and Metabolite Profiles of a Single Oral Dose of [14C]INCB099280 in Healthy Male Participants.
The study will assess the relative bioavailability between two dosage forms of tozorakimab (test dosage form and reference dosage form) and to assess the pharmacokinetic (PK) profiles of both dosage forms.
The primary purpose of this study is to determine the mass balance, routes, and rates of elimination of total radioactivity and characterize the pharmacokinetics (PK) of emraclidine, metabolite CV-0000364, and total radioactivity in plasma and whole blood following a single oral dose of [14C]-emraclidine in healthy adult male participants.
This study is testing a new study medicine which may be used to treat people with type 2 diabetes. NNC0650-0013 is a new medicine, which cannot be prescribed by doctors. The purpose of the study is to see if the new study medicine is safe, and how it works in participants body. Participants will get a single dose of the study medicine either as injection(s) under the skin or into a vein. The injection will be given by the study staff. If participants are chosen to get the study medicine as injections under the skin, participants will either get NNC0650-0013 or placebo (a "dummy medicine" without any active ingredients). Which treatment participants get is decided by chance. Participants will be required to fast overnight 3 times during the study. The study will last between 11 and 17 weeks.
The study aims to assess if a 16-week drop jump intervention from different heights shows different bone adaptations. Participants will complete four visits over a period of 16 weeks. An initial consultation will be conducted to ensure participants meet the inclusion criteria following participant recruitment. Estimated load being applied to the bone, will be assessed using non-invasive biomechanical procedures (Inertial Measurement Units, motion analysis, force plates) during drop jumps. Participants will be assigned a drop jump height of 0 cm, 30 cm or 60 cm based on a significant difference in external load at these heights or assigned to a control group where no jumps will be performed. Groups will be matched for body mass to ensure that jump height produces the load. The participants will be asked to perform 40 jumps (20 each side), 4 times per week ensuring jumping bouts are separated by 24 hours. Bone characteristics will be assessed via whole body dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scans and bilateral peripheral Quantitative Computed Tomography (pQCT) scans. Lab based jumping will take place on week 0, week 6, week 12, and week 16 to understand the loading applied during the different jump height groups. pQCT scans will take place on week 0, week 12, week 16 and DXA scans will take place week 0 and week 16. The reasoning of week 12 for pQCT being it may show a significant timepoint for bone formation during the remodelling cycle. During visits participants will complete a health screen, the Bone specific Physical Activity Questionnaire (BPAQ), a food frequency questionnaire and Pittsburgh sleep quality questionnaire alongside consent as tools to monitor any changes to participant lifestyle across the study. Differences in bone characteristics, lab measures and jump heights will be analysed between and within participants. The present study aims to use varied drop jump heights to identify an osteogenic dose response effect. Drop jumps have been previously used to expose osteogenic effects in research due to the load produced at impact. Is it possible to identify an optimum height for bone response during impact? If so do we then find anything above this height actually has negative or no effect on a group of individuals?
The purpose of this study is to investigate repeated doses of Lu AF28996 in healthy participants and co-administered with two other compounds, and in a separate cohort following co-administration with antibiotics, to see how well the doses are tolerated and what the body does to the drug after administering it.
A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Phase-I Clinical Study to Evaluate the Tolerability, Safety and PK Profiles of Human interferon alfa 1b inhalation solution in Healthy Adult Subjects after Administration of Single Ascending Doses and Multiple Ascending Doses
The purpose of this study is to learn about how much PF-07220060 will be taken up and processed by healthy male participants. The study is seeking for participants who: - are males aged 18 to 65 years and are healthy. - have Body mass index (BMI) between 17.5 and 30.5 kilograms/meter2 - have a total body weight of at least 50 kilograms. The study consists of two groups. In group 1, participants will take one amount of PF-07220060 by mouth. In group 2, participants will take one amount by mouth and one amount as an injection through a vein at the study clinic. In group 1, participants will stay at the clinic site for up to 15 days. In group 2, the duration of participants' stay depends on the results of group 1. During their stays, participants will have their blood, urine, and feces collected by the study doctors several times. We will measure the level of PF-07220060 in participants' blood, urine, and feces samples. This will help to know how much the study medicine is getting taken up by the body. At the end of the study, participants will be contacted by phone to check in. Participants will be involved in this study for about 9 weeks from the screening until the follow-up.
The main goals of this trial are to learn more about a) the safety and tolerability of Lu AF82422 (any new or worsening medical issues the participants have with treatment), b) the immunogenicity of Lu AF82422 (the potential for the drug to trigger an unwanted immune response), and c) the pharmacokinetic parameters of Lu AF82422 (how the drug is absorbed, distributed, and processed by the body). During the trial, healthy adult Chinese and Caucasian participants will receive a single dose of Lu AF82422, which will be given as an intravenous infusion.
The purpose of this study is to learn if the study medicine called Vepdegestrant changes how the body processes the other study medicine called Midazolam. This study is seeking participants who: - female who cannot have children. - are 18 years or older. - are overtly healthy as decided by medical tests. - have a body mass index (BMI) of 16 to 32 kilogram per meter squared. - have a total body weight of more than 45 kilograms (99 pounds). All participants in this study will receive one dose of midazolam alone by mouth in Period 1. In Period 2, all participants will receive vepdegestrant by mouth once a day for 15 days. Participants will also receive one dose of midazolam by mouth on day 1 and day 15. The levels of midazolam in Period 1 will be compared to the levels of midazolam in Period 2 Day 1 and Day 15 to decide if vepdegestrant affects how midazolam is processed differently in healthy adults. The study duration is 22 days and includes two periods. Participants will stay in the clinical research unit through the end of period 2. A follow-up visit for each participant takes place at 28 to 35 days after taking the study medicine for the last time.