View clinical trials related to Hyperlipidemia.
Filter by:This study evaluates the efficacy of MayoExpertAdvisor (MEA), a knowledge delivery tool, to improve adherence to best practices for patients with hyperlipidemia, atrial fibrillation and heart failure. Half of the clinicians will receive MEA, while the other half will not receive MEA. The investigators hypothesize care teams with access to MEA will act upon recommendations at a higher rate than those care teams in the standard of care arm without access to MEA.
The primary objective of this post marketing surveillance (PMS) is to determine the safety and efficacy of probucol in lowering the level of serum cholesterol in the blood.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the safety tolerability, and PK profile of K-312 and its metabolites in healthy Japanese and non-Japanese adults.
The purpose of this research study is to measure the amount of atorvastatin and ETC-1002 in the blood, to determine how ETC-1002 affects the level of LDL-cholesterol (bad cholesterol) and other markers of health and disease in blood and urine, and to see how ETC-1002 is tolerated in the body compared to placebo when added to stable atorvastatin 80 mg background therapy in statin-treated patients.
The purpose of this study is to compare the pharmacokinetics and safety of a controlled release (CR) version of pitavastatin (also referred to as NK-104) to immediate release (IR) pitavastatin in healthy adult volunteers.
Determine the effects on lipoprotein profiles of high dose concentrated dietary SFA (saturated fatty acids) (from MCT (medium-chain triglyceride) oil + butter) in combination added to coffee. The study will be conducted as a RCT in healthy adults without cardiometabolic disease or conditions that influence lipoprotein metabolism or other specific dietary recommendations.
The overall goal of the IQ-MAPLE project is to improve the quality of care provided to patients with several heart, lung and blood conditions by facilitating more accurate and complete problem list documentation. In the first aim, the investigators will design and validate a series of problem inference algorithms, using rule-based techniques on structured data in the electronic health record (EHR) and natural language processing on unstructured data. Both of these techniques will yield candidate problems that the patient is likely to have, and the results will be integrated. In Aim 2, the investigators will design clinical decision support interventions in the EHRs of the four study sites to alert physicians when a candidate problem is detected that is missing from the patient's problem list - the clinician will then be able to accept the alert and add the problem, override the alert, or ignore it entirely. In Aim 3, the investigators will conduct a randomized trial and evaluate the effect of the problem list alert on three endpoints: alert acceptance, problem list addition rate and clinical quality.
Medication adherence is defined as the extent to which a patient takes his or her medication as prescribed by their healthcare provider. One third to one half of all patients in the United States do not take their medication as directed, resulting in nearly $100B in avoidable hospital costs per year. Recent efforts to improve medication adherence in patients with multiple comorbidities have turned to case management and disease management programs. Connected monitoring devices offer an alternative- or supplement- to frequent nurse visits and outreach. These devices enable frequent monitoring and intervention but can also generate large volumes of data that can be difficult for care teams to manage. The present study explores the use of one such device- a technology-enabled, connected pillbox. Given the continued emphasis on bending the cost curve in US healthcare, clinical validation of tools that may improve the management of costly chronic diseases, such as diabetes, is essential.
This will be an 8 week multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled trial.
A Open-label, Randomized, Single-dose, 2x2 Crossover Study to Compare the Pharmacokinetics and Safety between a Fixed Dose Combination of Fimasartan/Amlodipine/Rosuvastatin versus Co-administration of a Fixed Dose Combination of Fimasartan/Amlodipine and Rosuvastatin in Healthy Male Subjects.