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Found 2 Actively Recruiting clinical trials
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are collecting detailed information about patients with venous thromboembolism (VTE), which includes blood clots in veins such as deep-vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. The project aims to improve doctors' understanding of VTE, especially in patients often excluded from clinical trials, like pregnant women, elderly individuals, cancer patients, and those with other complex health issues. The goal is to reduce deaths, clot recurrence, bleeding problems, and artery-related events by sharing this knowledge widely. The study involves gathering extensive data on each patient's health status, treatments, and outcomes during the first three months of therapy. This registry is available online to help doctors quickly find information on patients with similar medical profiles and make informed decisions about managing high-risk individuals. There are no specific interventions being tested; instead, the focus is on collecting real-world patient data. Participants provide informed consent and are followed for at least three years to monitor for new clot events and complications. Researchers track recurrences of VTE, bleeding episodes, and deaths, aiming to create tools that predict which patients are most at risk for problems. This ongoing data collection supports improving care and guiding treatment decisions for diverse patient groups over time.
Actively Recruiting
Researchers are evaluating whether the drug zilebesiran can reduce the risk of major cardiovascular events such as cardiovascular death, nonfatal heart attacks, strokes, or heart failure in adults who have hypertension that is not well controlled and who either have established cardiovascular disease or are at high risk for it. This Phase 3 global study is designed to continue until enough cardiovascular events have occurred to assess the treatment's effect. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive either zilebesiran or a placebo, both given as injections under the skin (subcutaneous administration). All participants will continue with their standard care, which includes treatment with at least two antihypertensive medications, one of which must be a diuretic such as a thiazide or loop diuretic. The study is double-blind, so neither participants nor researchers know who is receiving the active drug or placebo. During the study, participants will be closely monitored for cardiovascular events including heart attacks, strokes, heart failure hospitalizations, and cardiovascular deaths over approximately five years. Researchers will collect data on these events to determine the time until the first occurrence of any of these outcomes. Safety assessments and standard clinical evaluations will also be performed throughout the study period to ensure participant well-being.