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Schizophrenia clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Schizophrenia.

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NCT ID: NCT02636842 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

A Study of Aripiprazole Lauroxil in Subjects With Schizophrenia or Schizoaffective Disorder

Start date: December 2015
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The study will determine the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of aripiprazole lauroxil in adults with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder.

NCT ID: NCT02634684 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Pharmacologically-augmented Cognitive Therapies (PACTs) for Schizophrenia.

Start date: July 1, 2014
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This application seeks renewed support for MH59803, "Dopaminergic substrates of startle gating across species," to extend a clear path of "bench-to-bedside" progress towards a critical paradigm shift in therapeutic models for schizophrenia (SZ) and schizoaffective disorder, depressed type (SZA): the use of Pharmacologic Augmentation of Cognitive Therapies (PACTs). This novel therapeutic strategy for SZ/SZA directly addresses the need for more effective treatments for this devastating disorder. MH59803 has investigated the neural regulation of laboratory-based measures of deficient information processing in SZ/SZA patients, using rodents and healthy human subjects (HS) to explicate the biology of these deficits, and to establish a rational basis for developing novel therapies for SZ/SZA. In its first 9 years, MH59803 studies of the neural regulation of prepulse inhibition (PPI) of startle in rats focused on basic neurobiological and molecular mechanisms. Over the past 2 years of support, MH59803 studies moved "from bench-to-bedside," focusing on dopamine (DA) agonist effects on PPI and neurocognition in HS, and their regulation by genes identified in cross-species studies. These studies detected biological markers that predict PPI-enhancing and pro-cognitive effects of the DA releaser, amphetamine (AMPH) in humans, leading to specific predictions of AMPH effects on PPI, neurocognition and Targeted Cognitive Training in SZ/SZA patients. If confirmed in the present application, these predictions could help transform therapeutic approaches to SZ/SZA. This renewal application of MH59803 thus reflects a logical progression of studies at systems and molecular levels, translated first to HS, and now to potentially transformative therapeutic models in SZ/SZA patients.

NCT ID: NCT02634671 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Perception of Facial Emotions in Schizophrenia and 22q11 Deletion Syndrome

FaSchi22
Start date: November 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: The present study aims to identify the mechanisms underlying the deficit in facial emotion recognition reported both in schizophrenia and the 22q11.2 deletion syndrome, and thus, reveal a distinction between the two disorders. Indeed, despite the clinical overlap between the two syndromes, some of the symptoms appear to be specific to only one of them. In particular, the disturbance of visual functions is specifically observed in the 22q11.2DS. Hence, the difficulties in facial emotion recognition in schizophrenia and in the 22q11.DS are likely accounted by different cognitive impairments. Investigating which mechanisms are disturbed would allow a specialized support for patients. Our main hypothesis is that the deficit in facial emotion recognition is more related to visual impairments in the 22q11.2DS than in schizophrenia. This hypothesis will be tested in two groups of patients (22q11.2DS and schizophrenic patients) and a control group (healthy subjects) using an experimental paradigm based on electroencephalography (EEG). A second aim of this study is to determine whether the severity of the two disorders' symptoms is correlated with the cerebral response to facial expressions. To answer this question, a set of clinical and neuropsychological tests will be conducted for each patient.

NCT ID: NCT02634346 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

A Study of ALKS 3831 in Adults With Acute Exacerbation of Schizophrenia (the ENLIGHTEN-1 Study)

Start date: December 2015
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the efficacy of ALKS 3831 in adult subjects with acute exacerbation of schizophrenia.

NCT ID: NCT02634320 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

A Study of Aripiprazole Lauroxil (Also Known as ARISTADA TM) in Subjects With Schizophrenia

Start date: December 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the safety and tolerability of aripiprazole lauroxil (also known as ARISTADA, ALKS 9070).

NCT ID: NCT02627716 Recruiting - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Joint Crisis Plan Effectiveness in Preventing Relapses in Schizophrenia and Schizoaffective Disorder

SOS
Start date: December 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The Joint Crisis Plan = SOS Plan is a reference to a particular form of psychiatric advance directive which involves the patient, the healthcare team, their relatives and a third party caregiver as intermediary for the project. The main objective is to evaluate the effectiveness of the SOS Plan (JCP) in terms of the reduction in hospitalisations within 18 months of its development by comparison to the standard psychiatric care. Thus, the investigators' proposal is that SOS Plan's are regularly reassessed every 6 months and again where there is an unplanned psychiatric readmission that lasts beyond two weeks. Single blind multicentre randomised trial with parallel control groups. Effectiveness study of a psychiatric care strategy.

NCT ID: NCT02626832 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Regulation of Arginine-vasopressin (AVP)

REGAVP
Start date: February 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to develop a method for the assessment of central NMDA receptor functioning in patients with depression and schizophrenia. For this purpose a transitional approach is used based on preclinical studies that show a dose-dependent relationship between the activity of hypothalamic NMDA receptor and plasma AVP response to increasing plasma osmolality. Patients with schizophrenia, depression and healthy controls participated in this study. The Investigators found that in a subgroup of patients with schizophrenia the AVP response was low and that in a subgroup of subjects with depression the AVP response was high compared to healthy controls.

NCT ID: NCT02625103 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

The Significance of Deviation in Time From the 12-hour Standard Serum-clozapine Monitoring.

Start date: September 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The role of Therapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM) in clozapine dose adjustment have been debated. Blood samples for s-clozapine monitoring should be drawn 12 hours post dose. The scope of this trial is to describe changes of s-clozapine and s-N-desmethyl-clozapine within the range of 10-14 hours after the last administration of clozapine .

NCT ID: NCT02624167 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Schizophrenia

A Study to Determine the Safety, Tolerability and Efficacy NW-3509A in Patients With Chronic Schizophrenia

Start date: December 2015
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

A 4-week Phase IIa study to evaluate the safety and tolerability and efficacy of NW-3509A in patients with chronic schizophrenia that are not responding adequately to their current antipsychotic medication (aripiprazole or risperidone). NW-3509A is given as an oral dose range of 15 to 25 mg, BID in a 1:1 ratio.

NCT ID: NCT02622048 Recruiting - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Understanding and Helping Families: Parents With Psychosis

Start date: September 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this trial is to explore parent-child interactions in parents with and without psychosis, and ascertain whether a brief (10 week) supported self-help parenting program offered to parents in their own homes can help improve parents' self-efficacy and general well-being, as well as interpretations of their parent-child relationship and child behaviour in children who are 3-10 years old.