181,670 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
This is a 3-part study. Parts 1 and 2 are randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled investigations of single ascending doses (SAD) (Part 1) and multiple ascending doses (MAD) (Part 2) of orally administered BLU-808 in healthy adult participants. Part 2 will also include an evaluation of the effect of multiple doses of BLU-808 on the single-dose pharmacokinetics (PK) of midazolam. Part 3 is an open-label, 2-sequence, 2-period, food effect (FE) study in healthy adult participants.
Healthy Participants
Safety and Efficacy of AAV9/AP4B1 For Patients with AP4B1-related Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia Type 47 (SPG47): A Phase 1/2 Single-Center, Open-Label Study of Stereotactic Intra-cisterna Magna Administration. The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate whether a gene therapy can safely treat children with SPG47, a rare genetic condition that causes progressive spasticity and developmental delays. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Is the gene therapy safe and well tolerated? * Does the gene therapy improve motor function and developmental outcomes? Participants will: * Undergo screening assessments to confirm eligibility * Receive a single dose of the gene therapy vector * Attend follow-up visits for safety monitoring and developmental assessments over the course of five years
HSP, Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia, Hereditary Spastic Paraparesis, Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia Type 50, Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia Type 47, Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia Type 51, Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia Type 52, SPG47, AP4B1, Neurogenetic Disorders, Neurodevelopmental Conditions, Movement Disorders, Gene Therapy
The purpose of the research study is to learn more about the best ways to teach cooking and food skills to adults, and how cooking classes may help reduce one's stress and food waste, as well as improve their diet.
Nutrition, Healthy
The purpose of this study is to investigate which flow rate (higher versus lower) is most effective at increasing apneic time and preventing greater than 5% drop in desaturation, as well as assessing transcutaneous carbon dioxide (CO2) levels during airway procedures in children
Airway Disorder
TITLE: Toyos Clinic / A Phase 4 Study to Assess Longer Duration of Treatment with Cenegermin in Moderate to Severe Dry Eye-Associated Neurotrophic Keratitis
Dry Eye, Neurotrophic Keratitis
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) prevalence can be as high as 50% in low income and racially diverse primary care clinics, wherein only 13% of people with PTSD receive any treatment. This study extends a program of research by the investigator focused on developing adaptive interventions for PTSD. The adaptive intervention sequences a digital mental health intervention (DMHI) and brief trauma- and skills-focused treatments for PTSD. The selected treatments are brief and scalable, less burdensome to systems of care, and highly acceptable to diverse patients and care settings. These treatments are: web-administered Skills Training in Affective and Interpersonal Regulation (webSTAIR), Brief STAIR, and Written Exposure Therapy (WET).
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
Validate the SpO2 accuracy of the WatchPAT compared to arterial blood CO-Oximetry
Healthy
This is a case-control study to clinically validate the performance of PancreaSure, a protein biomarker test, to differentiate Stage I and Stage II pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) patient samples from samples acquired from control patients not diagnosed with PDAC but at increased risk of disease due to familial/genetic history or clinical symptoms.
Cancer of the Pancreas, Pancreatic Cancer, Pancreas Neoplasms, Pancreatic Carcinoma Stage I, Pancreatic Carcinoma Stage II
This is a case-control study to clinically validate the performance of a protein biomarker test to differentiate Stage I and Stage II pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) patient samples from samples acquired from control patients not diagnosed with PDAC but at increased risk of disease due to familial/genetic history or clinical symptoms.
Pancreatic Cancer Stage I, Pancreatic Cancer Stage II, Cancer Diagnosis, PDAC - Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma
A Phase 1, Open-Label Study Evaluating the Effect of Miricorilant on Hepatic Lipids in Patients with Presumed Metabolic Dysfunction-Associated Steatohepatitis (MASH)
Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH), Metabolic Dysfunction-Associated Steatohepatitis (MASH), Metabolic Dysfunction-Associated Steatotic Liver Disease (MASLD), Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD)
The goal of this clinical trial is to understand how well a culturally-specific "prebunking" video can improve vaccine information literacy and vaccine confidence among individuals in the Nusantara sociocultural sphere. The investigators hypothesize the individuals who watch the co-created "prebunking" intervention video will have improved vaccine literacy skills and vaccine confidence compared to individuals who watch a video about safe medication disposal.
Misinformation
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate whether a smartphone app-based ecological momentary intervention called Mindful Journey, which teaches mindfulness skills, can support adults in recovery from both opioid use disorder and chronic pain. The primary objective of this pilot study is to assess the feasibility and acceptability of Mindful Journey in this population.
Chronic Pain, Opioid Use Disorder
The purpose of the study is to evaluate the effect of Elranatamab therapy after cilta-cel measuring how long a patient with high risk relapsed myeloma lives without the myeloma getting worse(progressing), also known as progression-free survival (PFS). Patients with clinical high-risk myeloma, defined as having history of myeloma that has grown outside of the bones or having high risk mutations in the myeloma cells, benefit less from cilta-cel compared to myeloma patients without these characteristics.
Myeloma
The purpose of this study is to evaluate two dosing regimens of subcutaneous Nivolumab in combination with intravenous Ipilimumab and chemotherapy in participants with previously untreated metastatic or recurrent Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)
Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
This is a phase I study to assess the safety and feasibility of IL-8 receptor modified patient-derived activated CD70 CAR T cell therapy in CD70+ pediatric high-grade glioma
High-grade Glioma
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Fetoscopic Endoluminal Tracheal Occlusion (FETO) in cases of severe Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia (CDH).
Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia
This is a single-arm prospective study to record maternal and neonatal outcomes on subjects who undergo fetoscopic repair of Neural Tube Defects (NTD) at Oregon Health \& Science University (OHSU). Fetoscopic repair will take place between 24 weeks 0 days and 27 weeks 6 days gestation. Surgical, post-operative, delivery, and neonatal outcomes will be collected.
Neural Tube Defects, Spina Bifida
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if the non-ablative 1470 nm laser works to treat scarring alopecia in adults. It will also learn about the biochemical pathways involved in the use of laser to treat alopecia via hair follicle gene expression analysis before and after laser treatment. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Does a non-ablative laser work to effectively treat scarring alopecia? 2. What molecular pathways are involved in the laser treatment of scarring alopecia? Participants with scarring alopecia will: * Receive 3 laser treatments, spaced 1 month apart (Month 1, Month 2, Month 3), and attend 5 follow-up visits (Month 4, Month 6, Month 9, Month 12 and Month 15) * Have hair follicle samples collected via hair plucking of 10 hairs prior to the start and 1-month post-completion of laser treatments for gene expression analysis of inflammatory and fibrosis pathways implicated in alopecia. Hair samples will be de-identified and kept anonymous. * Fill out questionnaires at each visit * Keep a diary of any side effects from laser treatment
Scarring Alopecia
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of IBI3020 and to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and/or the recommended dose for expansion (RP2D) of IBI3020.
Solid Tumors
Intra-articular Posteromedial Surgeon Administered (IPSA) Block in this study describes a new type of medical procedure where a surgeon provides anesthetic medication directly into a specific area inside a knee joint to numb the pain during knee surgery. Intra-articular refers to inside of knee joint, posteromedial refers to the back and inner side of a knee joint, and surgeon administered means a surgeon is performing the procedure. Patients You will be randomly assigned to one of these three treatment groups: Group 1: Patients in this group will receive IPSA block and Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA). IPSA block is a pain numbing medication given by surgeon and injected inside the back and inner side of the knee joint. Local Infiltration Analgesia is a pain numbing medication injection given by the surgeon around the surgical knee area. The medications used in the procedure will be EXPAREL, and Bupivacaine HCL. Group 2 (Control): Patients in this group will receive Adductor Canal Block (ACB) and Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA). ACB is a pain numbing injection given by anesthesiologist near the adductor canal, a passage in the mid-thigh that contains nerves connecting the knee region. Local Infiltration Analgesia is a pain numbing medication injection given by the surgeon around the surgical knee area. The medications used in the procedure will be EXPAREL, and Bupivacaine HCL. Group 3: Patients in this group will receive Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA). Local Infiltration Analgesia is a pain numbing medication injection given by the surgeon around the surgical knee area. The medications used in the procedure will be EXPAREL, and Bupivacaine HCL. The study will evaluate; * How effective the pain relief is after surgery. * How much extra pain medication you need. * Your satisfaction with pain management and recovery * Any side effects.
Total Knee Arthroplasty
Bronchiolitis is the leading cause of pediatric morbidity and healthcare costs. Despite the commonplace use of bronchodilator treatments, like albuterol, in conditions like asthma, their efficacy in bronchiolitis remains controversial due to the heterogeneity in patient response. Although studies indicate that bronchodilators do not enhance outcomes in bronchiolitis, meta-analyses can obscure the heterogeneity of treatment effects. While bronchodilator response genetics have not been explored in bronchiolitis, treatment effectiveness variations often depend on genomic factors. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have linked genetic variants with bronchodilator response and outcomes in childhood asthma, suggesting a bronchodilator-responsive genotype. This proposal aims to extend this paradigm to bronchiolitis, addressing the gap in knowledge where GWAS and clinical characteristics intersect. The proposed study's objective is to characterize phenotypic and genotypic variations of children with bronchiolitis and their association with bronchodilator response. We hypothesize that children with bronchiolitis who exhibit clinical and historical characteristics associated with atopy and specific physical findings have genetic variants linked to bronchodilator response. To achieve this, we propose to (Aim 1) define airway responsiveness to bronchodilator treatment in children with bronchiolitis using the change in respiratory score, (Aim 2a) identify the associations between candidate genetic variants and bronchodilator response among children with bronchiolitis, and (Aim 2b) determine the associations between candidate genetic variants and clinical patient data to identify bronchodilator-responsive children with bronchiolitis. A prospective, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of a single albuterol dose in children aged 3 to 24 months presenting with bronchiolitis to the emergency department will be conducted to achieve these aims. Patient information and respiratory assessment outcomes will be collected before and after intervention. Blood, urine, DNA buccal swabs, and nasopharyngeal swabs will also be collected. Completion of these aims will result in a novel clinical prediction model for bronchodilator response determination in bronchiolitis, integrating clinical, physical, and genetic data. Furthermore, this research supports the candidates' career development goals of advancing training in clinical trial research design and execution and becoming an expert in clinical and translational methods to enhance pediatric emergency department health and outcomes. Ultimately, this work will inform an R01 application to validate an evidence-based prediction rule for identifying bronchodilator-responsive children with bronchiolitis through a multi-center emergency medicine research network, optimizing therapeutic approaches, and reducing resource use in those with a low likelihood of bronchodilator response.
Bronchiolitis, Bronchodilator Agents
In a 3-group trial with randomization and follow-up for 12 months, we will compare use of the VSC as well as health and quality of life outcomes among 650 older adults in St. Louis who receive either: (1) home delivered meals AND a GrandPad; (2) home-delivered meals but no GrandPad for 6 months; and (3) in person meals at senior center but no GrandPad.
Social Isolation in Older Adults, Quality of Life (QOL), Activities of Daily Living
A positive impact of a fermented dairy protein with prebiotic fiber supplement on self-reported GI complaints and wellbeing has been suggested (Wardenaar et al. 2024). The following project aims to further investigate the impact of this supplements in athletes with and without GI complaints in two separate data collections. Part I of the data collection aims to investigate the impact of this supplement vs. a placebo on carbohydrate malabsorption (as a potential cause for GI distress) in athletes that normally don't identify as having GI complaints (randomized double-blind cross over study design covering a total of 9 weeks, including a 3-week washout period). Part II of the data collection aims to confirm the earlier found results in the previous study (Wardenaar et al. 2024) in a group athletes self-reporting GI complaints that will be randomized into an intervention group or a placebo group (randomized double-blind parallel study design covering a total of 3 weeks).
Digestive Health, Quality of Life
The Hawks in Motion (HIM) High Intensity Exercise program is designed to implement the American Physical Therapy Clinical Practice Guidelines and American College of Sports Medicine recommendations for exercise for people with neurologic disability. Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) students administer the HIM High Intensity Exercise Program. A prior study evaluated the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of the HIM High Intensity Exercise Program and found it feasible, safe, and effective for 30 people with neurologic disabilities between the ages of 8-99 years. The investigators would like to evaluate whether participation in the HIM High Intensity Exercise Program affects mobility in everyday life. Physical activity will be measured one week before program implementation and one week after to assess if the participants' mobility in everyday improved.
Cerebral Palsy (CP), Stroke, Spinal Cord Injury, Traumatic Brain Injury, Charcot Marie Tooth Disease (CMT), Spina Bifida
The goal of this clinical study is to evaluate safety of Xenon gas inhalation in healthy volunteers. This first phase safety clinical study is part of evaluation of the xenon gas inhalation as a therapy for neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease. The investigators will administer xenon gas in low concentration to people via anesthetic machine, observe participants for sedation and any unexpected side effects, collect blood at each visit and measure the vital signs. There are four treatment groups in the study, which correspond with the duration of xenon gas treatment. Individual participation will last approximately 14 days over five visits: screening visit accompanied by the electrocardiogram, blood, and urine test; treatment visit for xenon gas inhalation treatment; and three follow up visits.
Healthy Volunteer Study
This proposal will implement and test feasibility and efficacy of school-based art therapy and yoga/mindfulness programming to reduce mental health disparities and foster resilience in youth. We will conduct a cross-over randomized trial with n=250 youth (any race/ethnicity or gender, ages 11-14) from two schools: one serving majority Black/African American students and one serving a population-representative ethnoracial demographic with 50% economically disadvantaged students. Baseline data collection will assess experiences of discrimination, negative experiences, positive experiences, and severity of posttraumatic stress, anxiety, depression, somatic symptoms, and resilience. Youth will be randomly assigned to art therapy or yoga/mindfulness for a quarter. Hour-long weekly sessions will occur during elective course times within school to bolster accessibility and generate data to inform future school-based care models for sustainability. Target schools co-developed this design with the research team. At the end of the quarter, participants will engage in post-intervention data collection, including qualitative interviews regarding their experience with the school-based programming. Participants will then cross over to the yoga/mindfulness or art therapy for the subsequent quarter, such that all participants receive both modalities. The methods described above will be repeated, including the assessments. Academic performance will be assessed throughout. We hypothesize that both modalities will be effective in reducing stress, anxiety, and depression related to discrimination, adversity, and trauma that disproportionately impacts racially and ethnically minoritized youth. We anticipate that qualitative feedback will identify points of optimization for programming and inform which students may be most responsive to what intervention(s).
Anxiety, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Trauma
This study is designed to evaluate whether a precision exercise regimen is feasible to implement within cancer populations, specifically stage II-III primary lung cancer patients receiving multimodal therapy, and delivered through telehealth.
NSCLC Stage II, NSCLC, Stage III
This study looks at whether in-person and computer-based motivational type interviews lead to the same kind of language and behavior change in young adults when they talk about their marijuana use. Researchers compared how much participants talked about wanting to change their level of marijuana use (change talk) or maintain their level of marijuana use (sustain talk) during each type of interview. Researchers investigated if change talk and sustain talk predicted who continued to use or not use marijuana. All participants completed: * A survey assessing their frequency of marijuana use. * A brief motivational type interview, either a face-to-face-motivational type interview or computer-mediated motivational type interview. * A two-month follow-up survey, again assessing their level of marijuana use.
Marijuana Use
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability of LY4086940 and how it is processed in the body. Participation in Part A of the study will last about 10 weeks and may include up to 6 visits. Participation in Parts B, C, D will last approximately 15 weeks and may include up to 9 visits.
Healthy, Overweight, Obesity, Type 2 Diabetes
This clinical trial assesses the impact of a family caregiver-delivered massage technique for use in cancer survivors with chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN). CIPN is a common cancer treatment side effect that impairs quality of life and daily functioning. Aside from the relatively transient effects of chemotherapy treatment (e.g., nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, infections, fatigue, hair loss), chemotherapy can damage nervous system structures leading to long-term CIPN effects including numbness in hands or feet, "pins and needles" or sudden stabbing pains, difficulty buttoning clothing or picking up objects, loss of balance and risk of falling, difficulty driving (steering wheel, foot pedals), and increased sensitivity to heat or cold. Caregivers who lack effective strategies of supportive care are at risk of feeling helpless, overwhelmed or frustrated watching their loved one suffer. Oncology massage (OM) teaches oncology-informed modifications, adaptations and safety precautions for a cancer survivor's specific condition, treatment history and side effects. An mobile health application (app) for caregivers can teach care for CIPN using safe oncology-informed massage techniques at home. Using the Peripheral Neuropathy Relief (PNR) program in the form of relaxation may help for stress reduction, reduced CIPN symptoms, and/or an increased sense of connection with patients and their family caregiver.
Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy, Malignant Solid Neoplasm