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Found 32 Actively Recruiting clinical trials

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Actively Recruiting

Researchers are evaluating efruxifermin (EFX) in adults aged 18 to 80 who have compensated cirrhosis caused by nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) or metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH). This Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study aims to assess the safety and effectiveness of EFX in improving liver health and delaying disease progression in this population. The study focuses on subjects with advanced liver fibrosis (stage 4) but without liver decompensation. Participants are randomly assigned to receive either efruxifermin or a placebo, both administered by subcutaneous injection. The study includes two cohorts: Cohort 1 requires biopsy confirmation of liver fibrosis and specific metabolic features, while Cohort 2 allows biopsy or non-invasive diagnosis. Treatment and observation continue over an extended period to evaluate changes in liver fibrosis and clinical events. During the study, researchers will monitor the time until significant clinical events such as disease progression or liver decompensation occur, with a follow-up of up to five years. For Cohort 1, the proportion of participants showing improvement in fibrosis without worsening steatohepatitis will be assessed at 96 weeks. Participants will undergo regular evaluations including clinical assessments and laboratory tests to track liver function and safety throughout the study period.

Age: 18Years - 80YearsAll GendersPhase 3
318 locations
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Actively Recruiting

Researchers are investigating the safety and effectiveness of efruxifermin in people with non-cirrhotic nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) or metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) who have moderate to advanced liver fibrosis (stage 2 or 3). This Phase 3 study is randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled, enrolling a total of 1650 participants in two groups to evaluate treatment outcomes. Participants will receive either efruxifermin or a placebo by subcutaneous injection. The study involves two cohorts, with Cohort 1 including patients who have biopsy-confirmed NASH or MASH and specific liver fibrosis and activity scores. The treatment period and detailed dosing schedules are not provided but the study compares the effects of the active drug against placebo. During the study, participants will be monitored for improvement in liver disease status, including resolution of NASH/MASH and at least a one-stage improvement in liver fibrosis after 52 weeks for Cohort 1. Long-term outcomes such as event-free survival will be observed over 240 weeks. Safety and efficacy assessments will be conducted throughout the study period, including evaluations of liver histology and metabolic health.

Age: 18Years - 80YearsAll GendersPhase 3
349 locations
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Actively Recruiting

Researchers are studying the effectiveness and safety of CC-97540, a CD19-targeted NEX-T CAR T cell therapy, in people with active systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), including lupus nephritis. This phase 2, open-label trial focuses on participants who have not responded well to glucocorticoids and at least two immunosuppressant treatments. The goal is to assess whether CC-97540 can help achieve drug-free remission of SLE symptoms within six months. Participants receive CC-97540 along with specified doses of fludarabine and cyclophosphamide on certain days as part of the treatment. The study involves multiple centers and includes patients with active disease despite current treatment. The dosing schedule and exact administration details are defined to evaluate the therapy's effects and monitor drug levels. During the study, participants are closely monitored for safety and response to treatment. Researchers measure the proportion of participants who reach remission without the need for drugs by month six. The study includes assessments of disease activity and organ function, with ongoing observation to understand the therapy's impact on lupus symptoms and potential side effects over time.

Age: 16Years +All GendersPhase 2
93 locations
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Actively Recruiting

Researchers are evaluating a combination of disitamab vedotin and tucatinib for treating patients with advanced or metastatic breast cancer or gastric cancer that express the HER2 protein. These solid tumors, which arise in organs like the breast or stomach, are challenging to treat once they have spread or grown larger. The trial focuses on patients whose tumors have HER2, a marker that can make the cancer grow and spread faster. The study aims to assess the safety and effectiveness of this drug combination in these cancers. The study includes a dose escalation phase where disitamab vedotin is given intravenously while tucatinib is taken orally twice daily at 300 mg. After determining two appropriate dose levels, the study proceeds to a dose optimization phase to evaluate safety and efficacy in different patient groups based on HER2 expression and cancer type. Following this, an expansion phase will test the treatment in four specific cohorts, including HER2-low and HER2-positive breast and gastric cancers. Participants will have regular assessments including monitoring for side effects, laboratory tests, and scans to evaluate tumor response using RECIST criteria. Safety will be followed for up to approximately five years after the last treatment dose. Key outcomes measured include the number of participants experiencing dose-limiting toxicities, adverse events, laboratory abnormalities, and dose changes. The study also tracks the objective response rate to the treatment over about three years.

Age: 18Years +All GendersPhase 2
141 locations
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Actively Recruiting

Researchers are evaluating the effectiveness and safety of Afimkibart (RO7790121) as both an induction and maintenance treatment for people with moderately to severely active Crohn's disease in this Phase III, multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. The goal is to understand how well Afimkibart works compared to placebo in managing symptoms and disease activity over time. Participants will receive either Afimkibart or a matching placebo. Afimkibart is given both as an intravenous infusion and as a subcutaneous injection. This treat-through study means participants continue on the assigned treatment throughout the study period, allowing evaluation of both initial and ongoing therapy effects. During the study, participants will be regularly assessed to measure clinical remission using the Crohn's Disease Activity Index (CDAI) and to check for endoscopic response at week 52. Researchers will monitor safety and treatment effects throughout, with the entire participation lasting up to one year. Assessments include clinical evaluations and endoscopic examinations to track disease changes and treatment impact.

Age: 16Years - 80YearsAll GendersPhase 3
362 locations
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Actively Recruiting

Researchers are evaluating how a new medicine called PF-08052667 works alone or combined with Bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG) and/or sasanlimab in adults with a type of bladder cancer that has not spread into the muscle layer but is likely to return or grow. The study includes people whose cancer has returned or not improved after standard treatments like BCG, as well as those who cannot receive or have no access to standard treatments. This is a Phase 1 study focusing on safety, tolerability, and antitumor effects of these treatments. The study has three parts: Part 1 tests PF-08052667 alone at increasing doses for participants whose disease worsened after standard treatment. Part 2 tests PF-08052667 combined with BCG and/or sasanlimab given at a fixed dose for similar participants. Part 3 further tests PF-08052667 alone or combined with BCG and/or sasanlimab at doses determined from earlier parts, including participants who never received standard treatment. PF-08052667 and BCG are given directly into the bladder through an intravesical infusion, while sasanlimab is given as a subcutaneous injection under the skin. PF-02921367 is used as a 10-minute bladder pre-wash before PF-08052667. Participants will receive study treatments until they decide to stop, are asked to leave, or for up to about two years. Follow-up continues after treatment until loss to follow-up, death, or study end. Researchers will monitor dose-limiting toxicities, adverse events, lab abnormalities, and survival outcomes including recurrence-free and event-free survival. Safety and effectiveness will be assessed throughout treatment and follow-up periods lasting up to approximately two years.

Age: 18Years +All GendersPhase 1
47 locations
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Actively Recruiting

This research aims to understand how avacincaptad pegol, a treatment approved in the US, is used for people with geographic atrophy caused by age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Geographic atrophy is an advanced stage of AMD where cells in the retina waste away, leading to worsening central vision and possible permanent vision loss. The study focuses on observing treatment patterns and safety in routine clinical practice rather than testing new effects. Participants in this study will receive avacincaptad pegol through intravitreal injections, which are injections into the eye. The study collects information from patients who have already been prescribed this treatment by their doctors. There is no experimental intervention from the study team, and treatment decisions are made by the patients' doctors. The study follows patients for up to 3 to 5 years, depending on when they join. While in the study, participants will have regular eye exams as part of their usual care. They will also complete surveys about their eye health at the start of treatment, every 6 months for the first 2 years, then annually afterward. Researchers will track treatment details like the number and dose of injections, treatment duration, reasons for stopping treatment, and patient characteristics. Safety and treatment patterns are monitored through medical records during and after treatment.

All Genders
65 locations
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Actively Recruiting

Researchers are evaluating whether the medicine vicadrostat, combined with empagliflozin, helps adults with chronic heart failure (HF) who have a weakened heart pumping function, specifically a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) below 40%. Eligible participants must have been diagnosed with chronic HF at least 3 months before joining. The study is a Phase III trial designed to compare the effects of vicadrostat plus empagliflozin against placebo plus empagliflozin in people with symptomatic chronic HF classified as New York Heart Association classes II to IV. Participants are randomly assigned to one of two groups. One group takes tablets containing vicadrostat and empagliflozin, while the other group takes placebo tablets that look like vicadrostat along with empagliflozin. Tablets are taken once daily for a period ranging from about 6 months up to about 3.5 years. Participants continue their usual heart failure treatments during the study. The study is double-blind, meaning neither the participants nor the study staff know who is receiving which treatment. During the study, participants regularly visit the study site or may have phone contacts for follow-up. They answer questions about their health and well-being. Doctors monitor and record any worsening of heart failure symptoms, hospital visits due to heart failure, or deaths. They also check participants' overall health and note any side effects. The main outcome measured is the time until a participant experiences cardiovascular death, hospitalization for heart failure, or an urgent heart failure visit, over up to 43 months of follow-up.

Age: 18Years +All GendersPhase 3
639 locations
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Actively Recruiting

This study is open to adults aged 18 or above legal age with heart failure. People can join the study if they have heart failure symptoms and a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of 40% or more. The purpose of this study is to find out whether vicadrostat (BI 690517) in combination with empagliflozin helps people with heart failure. Participants are put into 2 groups by chance. Every participant has an equal chance of being in each group. The groups are: * Vicadrostat/empagliflozin group: participants take vicadrostat/empagliflozin as tablets once a day. * Placebo/empagliflozin group: participants take placebo/empagliflozin as tablets once a day. Participants can stay in the study as long as they benefit from treatment and can tolerate it. During this time, they visit their doctors regularly. The doctors regularly check participants' health and take note of any unwanted effects. The study staff may also contact the participants by phone. Participants also regularly answer questions about their well-being. The study does not have a fixed duration. It continues until there is enough data to see if the treatment is working.

Age: 18Years +All GendersPhase 3
653 locations
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Actively Recruiting

Researchers are evaluating the effect of adding chemotherapy to immunotherapy (pembrolizumab) compared to using immunotherapy alone in treating older adults aged 70 and above with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (stage IIIB-IV). This phase III trial aims to determine if combining chemotherapy with pembrolizumab improves overall survival and other outcomes like progression-free survival, response rates, toxicity, and quality of life in this vulnerable patient group. Participants are randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups. In the immunotherapy-alone group, patients receive pembrolizumab intravenously every 21 days for four cycles, followed by maintenance pembrolizumab every 21 or 42 days for up to two years if there is no disease progression or unacceptable side effects. In the combination group, patients receive pembrolizumab plus a chemotherapy regimen chosen by their doctor, including drugs such as pemetrexed, carboplatin, nab-paclitaxel, or paclitaxel, given intravenously on specific schedules for four cycles, followed by the same pembrolizumab maintenance. Imaging scans like MRI, CT, and PET are performed at baseline and throughout the study. During the study, participants undergo various assessments including imaging scans, laboratory tests, and questionnaires to evaluate treatment effects, side effects, and quality of life. Researchers monitor overall survival for up to five years from randomization, with follow-up visits every three months for the first two years and every six months thereafter until five years. Additional exploratory analyses include safety, tolerability, and correlations with gut microbiome and geriatric assessments to better understand treatment outcomes in this population.

Age: 70Years +All GendersPhase 3
318 locations

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