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Found 108 Actively Recruiting clinical trials
RECRUITING
Patients entering the study will attend for implantation of a pacemaker device and be randomised to either right ventricular pacing or physiological pacing. Patients at sites participating in echo sub-study will be informed of and given opportunity to consent to echo sub-study, this will be optional to them, even if they have consented to the main study.
RECRUITING
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, Phase 2/3 study comparing the efficacy and safety of elenestinib (BLU-263) + symptom directed therapy (SDT) with placebo + SDT in participants with indolent systemic mastocytosis (ISM) whose symptoms are not adequately controlled by SDT. Parts 1 and 2 will enroll participants with ISM. Participants enrolled in Part 2 will roll over onto Part 3 to receive treatment with elenestinib in an open-label fashion following completion of the earlier Part. Part K will enroll participants with ISM who have previously received an approved selective KIT inhibitor. The study also includes pharmacokinetic (PK) groups that will enroll participants with ISM.
RECRUITING
Researchers are looking for ways to treat germinal center B-cell-like diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (GCB DLBCL). DLBCL is a fast-growing blood cancer that affects B-cells. GCB is a type of DLBCL that affects young B-cells that are still maturing. The goal of this study is to learn if more people who receive zilovertamab vedotin (MK-2140) and R-CHP have the cancer respond (go away) than those who receive polatuzumab vedotin and R-CHP.
RECRUITING
Our company, previously known as BeiGene, is now officially BeOne Medicines. Because some of our older studies were sponsored under the name BeiGene, you may see both names used for this study on this website.
RECRUITING
This is an open-label (identity of assigned study drug will be known) study designed to collect long-term safety and efficacy data and provide ibrutinib access to participants in completed ibrutinib studies. PCI-32765 (Ibrutinib) is a first-in-class, potent, orally-administered, covalently-binding small molecule inhibitor of bruton's tyrosine kinase. "PCI-32765" and "ibrutinib" refer to the same molecule; hereafter, "ibrutinib" will be used. Participants will continue with the current ibrutinib dosing regimen established in the parent ibrutinib study until the investigator determines that the participant is no longer benefitting from treatment (ie, disease progression or unacceptable toxicity has occurred), the participant withdraws consent, alternative access to ibrutinib is available and feasible (example, participant assistance program or commercial source of ibrutinib), or for other reasons as defined in the protocol, or until the end of the study, whichever occurs earlier. Safety will be monitored throughout the study and summarized. Efficacy may be analyzed in combination with the data collected in the parent protocol. There is no formal hypothesis testing planned for this long-term extension study. Participants for whom alternative access to ibrutinib is not available and feasible can receive treatment with single-agent ibrutinib until end of study, which is defined as the time when all participants still receiving study treatment have transitioned to commercial or alternative access to ibrutinib, have stopped receiving ibrutinib treatment, or upon a decision by the sponsor to terminate the study, whichever occurs earlier.
RECRUITING
The master protocol study J2N-MC-JZNY provides a framework to enable the evaluation of the long-term safety and efficacy of pirtobrutinib after completion of clinical studies evaluating pirtobrutinib. The clinical studies that will feed into this master protocol are referred to as originator studies. The master protocol will govern individual study-specific appendices (ISAs) that will represent participants from the individual, completed originator studies. These participants will have the opportunity to enter this study and continue to receive treatment or continue follow-up visits. Overall, the master protocol and the individual ISAs, when combined, define the investigations for this study.
RECRUITING
This study is a prospective, observational, multi-country, multi-Centre, single-arm registry designed to evaluate the clinical safety and performance of VIVO ISAR, Polymer Free Sirolimus Eluting Coronary Stent System. The study population is made up of subjects who have undergone PCI using VIVO ISAR and are receiving standard of care short DAPT treatment (≤ 3 months) . Subjects will be screened by site teams and offered the opportunity to participate in the registry after their procedure. Rationale for this study is to evaluate clinical outcomes and collect data of the Polymer Free Sirolimus Eluting Coronary Stent in real world CAD patients with follow-up at 1 month, 3 months and 12 months. All medications and procedures to be used/ performed in this registry are commonly used/performed for clinical indications as part of standard of care and have well-defined safety profiles. The study does not influence the choice of device utilized nor does it alter the routine standard of care. After a patient has been treated with the Vivo ISAR, informed consent will be requested and the eligible patient will be registered in the study. Baseline data will be completed using medical notes. All recruited subjects will then be followed as per routine practice together with telephonic follow-up at 30 days, 3 months and 12 months from the baseline PCI procedure date. The 30 day, 3 months and 12 month telephonic follow up will consist of a verbally report of the DAPT anticoagulation medications continued, about any lab assessments that might have happened, recording of any adverse events, and any interventional treatment that has occurred since previous contact.
RECRUITING
The purpose of this study is to determine the recommended Phase 2 dose(s) (RP2D\[s\]) of bleximenib in phase 1 Part 1 (Dose Escalation) and to determine the safety and tolerability at RP2D in Phase 1 Part 2 (Dose expansion). The purpose of the Phase 2 part of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of bleximenib at the RP2D.
RECRUITING
The drug STP938 is an inhibitor of an enzyme called cytidine triphosphate synthase 1 (CTPS1). CTPS1, and a very similar enzyme cytidine triphosphate synthase 2 (CTPS2), control the final step in the production of the cytidine triphosphate (CTP). CTP is an essential building block of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA). Studies of people with inherited mutations of the CTPS1 gene indicate that certain types of blood cells required CTPS1 in order to divide rapidly, whereas other cells in the body use the CTPS2 enzyme. Based on these observations, it is expected that blocking CTPS1, using the drug STP938, may be an effective treatment for certain types of cancer that arise from blood cells. The purpose of this study is to see if STP938 is effective at treating different types of lymphoma. STP938 will be given as a tablet. Blood samples will be taken during the study in order to understand the effects of STP938 on the lymphoma and on the rest of the body. The main outcome of the first part of the study is to see if STP938 can be given safely to patients with lymphoma, and to work out the best dose of STP938. The main outcome of the second part of the study is to see if ST938 is effective in treating different types of lymphoma.
RECRUITING
There is an evolving crisis of chronic liver disease (CLD) in the UK and it is the only major chronic disease which is on the rise. The advanced stages of CLD, known as cirrhosis (a hardening and scarring of the liver), is the third biggest cause of death and loss of working life years behind heart disease and self-harm. People die from cirrhosis young with more than 1 in 10 in their 40s. Patients with cirrhosis are very susceptible to infections, antibiotics become ineffective and patients may become infected with 'super bugs'. There is an urgent need for antibiotic-free approaches. The body contains trillions of microscopic organisms called bacteria which play an important role in keeping us healthy. Many of these bacteria live within our bowel and help our immune system fight infection. There are increased numbers of 'unfriendly' bowel bacteria in patients with cirrhosis which emit substances that are harmful to health and disrupt the immune system. It could be beneficial to replace the unfriendly bowel bacteria in patients with cirrhosis with bacteria donated from a healthy person by performing a type of bowel bacteria transplant (known as faecal microbiota transplantation or FMT). The PROFIT trial was recently performed as a preliminary trial of FMT which was placed into the bowel with the help of a flexible camera (endoscopy). The study showed FMT was safe with no serious side effects, but patients told us they would prefer to take tablets rather than have an endoscopy. The chief investigator and her team have therefore made a capsule which contains dried stool from a healthy donor. Participants will need to take 5 of these capsules to achieve the same dose. The PROMISE clinical trial is to test whether treating patients with FMT capsules will reduce the likelihood of them getting an infection by measuring the time it takes to develop an infection resulting in hospital admission. This will be compared to a 'dummy' capsule that contains no FMT (placebo). Patients will be selected at random to have FMT treatment or placebo and both the study team and the patients will not know which treatment they are taking. Participants will need to take 5 capsules every 3-months. Participants will continue treatment for a total of 21-months or until they develop their first infection leading to hospital admission and will be followed-up for a maximum of 2-years. This study will also examine if having FMT will reduce the side effects of cirrhosis and if it has beneficial effects on the liver and immune system. The investigator team will study whether it reduces hospital admissions, the incidence of 'super-bug' infections and death. Laboratory studies will look at whether FMT treatment will help the immune system fight infection. The World Health Organisation describes the resistance of bacteria to the effects of antibiotics as one of the biggest threats to global health. The discovery of new antibiotics has not kept pace. The government's white paper proposes a 5-year plan to tackle resistance to antibiotics. Consultation with our patient co-applicant, patient advisory group, The British Liver Trust and Guts UK Charity have highlighted recurrent hospitalisation, over-use of antibiotics and fear of acquiring a 'super-bug' as being important priorities to patients. The results and study findings will be published in conjunction with patient support groups, the wider media and the NHS. The investigator will ensure the research impacts on the management of patients with CLD and shapes policy and guideline development.
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