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Iron Deficiency Anemia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04915820 Completed - Clinical trials for Iron Deficiency Anemia

Iron and COVID-19 Vaccine Response

Start date: May 29, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Vaccines often underperform in Africa compared to high-income countries. Why vaccines do not work as well in Africa remains uncertain. Malnutrition likely plays a role. Our study objective is to assess whether iron deficiency anaemia in young women impairs their immune response to the COVID-19 vaccine, and whether iron treatment improves their response.

NCT ID: NCT04915196 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Iron Deficiency Anemia

Tolerability of Iron Therapy in Women With AUB

Start date: July 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Telephone surveys of female patients using liposomally-bound iron and traditional iron sulphate preparations for the management of iron deficiency anemia to determine gastrointestinal tolerability.

NCT ID: NCT04913649 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Iron Deficiency Anemia

Intravenous Iron to Treat Postoperative Anemia in Older Cardiac Surgery Patients

AGE-ANEMIA
Start date: September 23, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Postoperative anemia is common in cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. Iron deficiency delays the recovery from postoperative anemia and may negatively affect the postoperative trajectory of cardiac surgery patients. The objective of the study is to determine the effect of treatment of postoperative iron deficiency anemia with intravenous iron on disability 90 days after surgery. This will be evaluated in a randomized placebo-controlled double blind two-center trial in which 310 elective cardiac surgery patients will be included.

NCT ID: NCT04912661 Completed - Clinical trials for Iron Deficiency Anemia

Iron and Vaccine Response

Start date: May 29, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Vaccines often underperform in Africa compared to high-income countries. Why vaccines do not work as well in Africa remains uncertain. Malnutrition likely plays a role. Our study objective is to assess whether iron deficiency anaemia in young women impairs their immune response to viral vaccines, and whether iron treatment improves their response.

NCT ID: NCT04840433 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Iron Deficiency Anemia

Location of Lesions Responsible for Blood Loss in the Gastrointestinal (GI) Tract

A-MACE
Start date: April 12, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to identify the prevalence, nature and location of lesions in the GI tract that may contribute to iron deficiency anaemia and compare diagnostic yied of the upper GI magnetic controlled capsule endoscopy with conventional gastroscopy.

NCT ID: NCT04821349 Completed - Clinical trials for Iron Deficiency Anemia

Role of AI in CE for the Identification of SB Lesions in Patients With Small Intestinal Bleeding.

ArtIC
Start date: February 16, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Capsule Endoscopy (CE) is a safe, patient friendly and easy procedure performed for the evaluation of gastrointestinal tract unable to be explored via conventional endoscopy. The most common indication to perform SBCE is represented by Suspected Small Bowel Bleeding (SSBB). According to the widest meta-analysis available in literature, SBCE shows a diagnostic yield in SSBB of about 60%, and angiodysplasias are the most relevant findings, accounting for 50% of patients undergoing SBCE for SSBB. Accordingly, it represents the first line examination in SSBB investigation for determining the source of bleeding, if primary endoscopy results negative. Despite its high clinical feasibility, the evaluation of CE-video-captures is one of the main drawbacks since it is time consuming and requests the reader to concentrate to not miss any lesion. In order to reduce reading time, several software have been developed with the aim to cut similar images and select relevant images. For example, automated fast reading software have demonstrated to significantly reduce reading time without impacting the miss rate in pathological conditions affecting diffusely the mucosa (as IBD lesions do). Not the same assumption can be taken for isolated lesions since several studies reported an unacceptable miss rate for such a detection modality. New advancements such as artificial intelligence made their appearance in recent years. Deep convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have demonstrated to recognize specific images among a large variety up to exceed human performance in visual tasks. A Deep Learning model has been recently validated in the field of Small Bowel CE by Ding et al. According to their data collected on 5000 patients, the CNN-based auxiliary model identify abnormalities with 99.88% sensitivity in the per patient analysis and 99.90% sensitivity in the per-lesion analysis. With this perspective, it is believable that AI applied to SBCE can significantly shorten the reading time and support physicians to detect available lesions without losing significant lesions, further improving the diagnostic yield of the procedure.

NCT ID: NCT04812873 Completed - Clinical trials for Iron Deficiency Anemia

Registry Study of ID & IDA in Korean Patients With Heart Failure

HFRegistry
Start date: January 30, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The prevalence of Iron Deficiency and Iron Deficiency Anemia in Korean HF patient

NCT ID: NCT04793906 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Iron Deficiency Anemia

Meals to Improve Absorption of Iron Supplements

Start date: May 10, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

One of the targeted objectives of Healthy People 2020 is to reduce iron deficiency among women of reproductive age (WRA). Consuming foods rich in iron and/or oral iron supplementation is typically recommended to improve iron status; however, global rates of iron deficiency remain high. Thus, nutritional strategies to improve/maintain iron status are warranted. Dietary iron is found in two different forms: heme and non-heme iron. Non-heme iron is found in plant-based sources and is commonly used as a supplement and food fortificant. Absorption of non-heme iron is low compared to heme iron, which is found in animal sources, such as beef. Studies have also demonstrated that beef contains an unidentified factor that stimulates the absorption of non-heme iron. The primary objective of the proposed study is to determine the effects of incorporating daily meals containing beef or plant-based alternative with or without an iron supplement on indicators of iron status in iron-deficient WRA.

NCT ID: NCT04782986 Completed - Clinical trials for Iron Deficiency Anemia

Pan-intestinal Capsule Endoscopy Versus Colonoscopy in Iron Deficiency Anemia or Overt GI Bleeding

Start date: June 19, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The authors hypothesize that in patients with iron deficiency anemia or gastrointestinal bleeding, pan-intestinal capsule endoscopy is a safe and well tolerated procedure that may improve diagnostic yield comparatively to the current standard invasive colonoscopy.

NCT ID: NCT04778072 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Iron Deficiency Anemia

A Clinical Study on Adherence and Efficacy of Different Doses of Active Iron in Treatment Resistant Subjects

Start date: October 8, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A randomized, placebo controlled, parallel group, double blind study to compare the 3-month adherence and efficacy of Active Iron in subjects with or at-risk of iron deficiency and a history of intolerance to oral iron. Subjects with intolerance and treatment failure due to oral iron (male and female subjects, aged 18 to 55 years, with mild to moderate iron deficiency, with or without anaemia) are eligible. Sixty subjects are randomised into three groups (14 mg elemental iron, 25mg elemental iron and 50mg elemental iron daily). The primary objective is to assess adherence/persistence (including using pill counts). Secondary objectives are to assess gastrointestinal tolerability, haematological efficacy and health related quality of life.