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Dichoptic Treatment for Amblyopia in Children 4 to 7 Years of Age
Jaeb Center for Health Research
Amblyopia
In children 4 to 7 years of age, to determine if treatment with 1 hour per day 6 days per
week of watching dichoptic movies/shows wearing the Luminopia headset is non-inferior to
treatment with 2 hours of patching per day 7 days per week with respect to change in
amblyopic eye distance VA from rand1 expand
In children 4 to 7 years of age, to determine if treatment with 1 hour per day 6 days per week of watching dichoptic movies/shows wearing the Luminopia headset is non-inferior to treatment with 2 hours of patching per day 7 days per week with respect to change in amblyopic eye distance VA from randomization to 26 weeks. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jul 2024 |
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Influenza & COVID-19 Obstetric and Perinatal Epidemiology Study in India
Boston University
Influenza
COVID-19
SARS-COV-2 Infection
Other Respiratory Viruses
Perinatal Morbidity
This study will be conducted as a prospective cohort study, enrolling all eligible women
in their first trimester of pregnancy during a baseline visit during week 6-13 of
pregnancy at Government Medical College Hospital, Nagpur. The Hospital provides primary,
secondary, and tertiary care and the ob1 expand
This study will be conducted as a prospective cohort study, enrolling all eligible women in their first trimester of pregnancy during a baseline visit during week 6-13 of pregnancy at Government Medical College Hospital, Nagpur. The Hospital provides primary, secondary, and tertiary care and the obstetric department delivers about 10,000 babies a year. The hypothesis is that co-infection of other respiratory viruses (ORV), particularly COVID-19 and Influenza increases the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes in mothers and babies and could address the current standard of care in India to not vaccinate pregnant women during pregnancy, by either encouraging vaccination against both viruses before planning a pregnancy or during pregnancy based on global data supporting the safety of this strategy. Type: Observational Start Date: Dec 2023 |
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Study to Learn About the Safety of Fazirsiran and if it Can Help People With Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Li1
Takeda
Alpha1-Antitrypsin Deficiency
The liver produces a protein called alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT). AAT is normally released
into the bloodstream. In some people, the liver makes an abnormal version of the AAT
protein, called Z-AAT. Making an abnormal version of the AAT protein can result in liver
disease as Z-AAT builds up in liver c1 expand
The liver produces a protein called alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT). AAT is normally released into the bloodstream. In some people, the liver makes an abnormal version of the AAT protein, called Z-AAT. Making an abnormal version of the AAT protein can result in liver disease as Z-AAT builds up in liver cells, which leads to liver problems such as liver scarring (fibrosis), continuing liver damage (cirrhosis), and eventually end stage liver disease. Fazirsiran is a medicine that reduces the creation of the Z-AAT protein and thus the build-up of this abnormal protein in the liver. People with this type of liver disease who already have mild liver scarring will take part in the study. They will be treated with fazirsiran or a placebo for about 2 years. This study will check the long-term safety of fazirsiran, whether participants tolerate the treatment and if there are any effects on liver scarring. A liver biopsy, a way of collecting a small tissue sample from the liver, will be taken twice during the study. Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2024 |
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Chemotherapy Combined With Immunotherapy Versus Immunotherapy Alone for Older Adults With Stage III1
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Advanced Lung Non-Small Cell Carcinoma
Stage IIIB Lung Cancer AJCC v8
Stage IIIC Lung Cancer AJCC v8
Stage IV Lung Cancer AJCC v8
This phase III trial compares the effect of adding chemotherapy to immunotherapy
(pembrolizumab) versus immunotherapy alone in treating patients with stage IIIB-IV lung
cancer. Immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies, such as pembrolizumab, may help the
body's immune system attack the cancer, and1 expand
This phase III trial compares the effect of adding chemotherapy to immunotherapy (pembrolizumab) versus immunotherapy alone in treating patients with stage IIIB-IV lung cancer. Immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies, such as pembrolizumab, may help the body's immune system attack the cancer, and may interfere with the ability of tumor cells to grow and spread. Chemotherapy drugs work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. Giving pembrolizumab and chemotherapy may help stabilize lung cancer. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jul 2024 |
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Analysis of Lumbar Spine Stenosis Specimens for Identification of Transthyretin Cardiac Amyloidosis
Columbia University
Lumbar Spinal Stenosis
Cardiac Amyloidosis
ATTR Amyloidosis Wild Type
ATTR Gene Mutation
ATTRV122I Amyloidosis
Primary objective:
To identify older adults with transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTR-CA) early in the
course of the illness, at a time when disease modifying therapies are most effective.
The specific aims of this epidemiologic investigation include:
1. To identify subjects with previous l1 expand
Primary objective: To identify older adults with transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTR-CA) early in the course of the illness, at a time when disease modifying therapies are most effective. The specific aims of this epidemiologic investigation include: 1. To identify subjects with previous lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) Surgery who have evidence of transthyretin (TTR) amyloid deposits in spinal specimens and could be at risk for ATTR cardiac amyloidosis. 2. To evaluate for ATTR-CA among those with localized TTR in the spinal tissue. The study will also explore the following: 1. The prevalence of amyloid in lumbar spinal stenosis specimens by Congo Red staining. 2. The prevalence of TTR deposits among subjects with amyloid as determined by mass spectrometry. 3. Evaluation of a novel artificial intelligence technique for that can identify amyloid histologically with standard H&E staining. 4. Difference in ATTR-CA prevalence between subjects with TTR and indeterminate amyloid deposits in subject's spine by myocardial uptake of technetium pyrophosphate scan (Tc99-PYP). Type: Observational Start Date: Sep 2023 |
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Mitigating the Impact of Stigma and Shame Among People Living With HIV and Substance Use Disorders
Boston University
Hiv
Substance Use Disorders
People living with HIV and substance use disorders (SUDs) are less likely to be virally
suppressed, which can lead to HIV transmission and negative health outcomes. This hybrid
type 1 study will assess the efficacy, mechanisms, as well as facilitators and barriers
to implementing the MATTER interve1 expand
People living with HIV and substance use disorders (SUDs) are less likely to be virally suppressed, which can lead to HIV transmission and negative health outcomes. This hybrid type 1 study will assess the efficacy, mechanisms, as well as facilitators and barriers to implementing the MATTER intervention, a virtually delivered 5-session text-enhanced psychobehavioral intervention designed to facilitate viral suppression by addressing internalized stigma and shame as barriers to engagement in HIV care among individuals living with HIV and SUDs in two locations with different levels of HIV resources (i.e., the Boston, Massachusetts and Miami, Florida metro areas). MATTER aims to mitigate the negative behavioral consequences of internalized stigma and shame on viral suppression by a) developing behavioral self-care goal setting skills and related self-efficacy, b) increasing metacognitive awareness (i.e., non-judgmental awareness of emotions and cognitions), and c) teaching and reinforcing compassionate self-restructuring (i.e., self- compassion), in addition to providing access to phone-based resource navigation. Scalable interventions such as MATTER are essential to our efforts to end the HIV epidemic in high priority regions. Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2025 |
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Shorter Chemo-Immunotherapy Without Anthracycline Drugs for Early-Stage Triple Negative Breast Canc1
SWOG Cancer Research Network
Anatomic Stage I Breast Cancer AJCC v8
Anatomic Stage II Breast Cancer AJCC v8
Anatomic Stage IIIA Breast Cancer AJCC v8
Anatomic Stage IIIB Breast Cancer AJCC v8
Early Stage Triple-Negative Breast Carcinoma
This phase III trial compares the effects of shorter chemotherapy (chemo)-immunotherapy
without anthracyclines to usual chemo-immunotherapy for the treatment of early-stage
triple negative breast cancer. Paclitaxel is in a class of medications called
anti-microtubule agents. It stops cancer cells f1 expand
This phase III trial compares the effects of shorter chemotherapy (chemo)-immunotherapy without anthracyclines to usual chemo-immunotherapy for the treatment of early-stage triple negative breast cancer. Paclitaxel is in a class of medications called anti-microtubule agents. It stops cancer cells from growing and dividing and may kill them. Carboplatin is in a class of medications known as platinum-containing compounds. It works in a way similar to the anticancer drug cisplatin, but may be better tolerated than cisplatin. Carboplatin works by killing, stopping or slowing the growth of cancer cells. Cyclophosphamide is in a class of medications called alkylating agents. It works by damaging the cell's deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and may kill cancer cells. It may also lower the body's immune response. Docetaxel is in a class of medications called taxanes. It stops cancer cells from growing and dividing and may kill them. Doxorubicin is an anthracycline chemotherapy drug that damages DNA and may kill cancer cells. Pembrolizumab may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth. Shorter treatment without anthracycline chemotherapy may work the same as the usual anthracycline chemotherapy treatment for early-stage triple negative breast cancer. Type: Interventional Start Date: Sep 2023 |
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Support Via Online Social Networks to Promote Safe Infant Care Practices
University of Virginia
Breastfeeding
Infant Death
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Without Mention of Autopsy
This study aims to improve adherence to American Academy of Pediatrics safe sleep (SS)
recommendations and improve rates of initiation and duration of partial and exclusive
breastfeeding (BF); and reduce Black/White disparities in these practices through the use
of private Facebook groups providing1 expand
This study aims to improve adherence to American Academy of Pediatrics safe sleep (SS) recommendations and improve rates of initiation and duration of partial and exclusive breastfeeding (BF); and reduce Black/White disparities in these practices through the use of private Facebook groups providing a) evidence-based education through videos and other multi-media supporting best practices and b) an online community and social network of other pregnant WIC clients and new parents. Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2024 |
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Study to Check the Safety of Fazirsiran and Learn if Fazirsiran Can Help People With Liver Disease1
Takeda
Alpha1-Antitrypsin Deficiency
The main aim of this study is to learn if fazirsiran reduces liver scarring (fibrosis)
compared to placebo. Other aims are to learn if fazirsiran slows down the disease
worsening in the liver, to get information on how fazirsiran affects the body (called
pharmacodynamics), to learn if fazirsiran re1 expand
The main aim of this study is to learn if fazirsiran reduces liver scarring (fibrosis) compared to placebo. Other aims are to learn if fazirsiran slows down the disease worsening in the liver, to get information on how fazirsiran affects the body (called pharmacodynamics), to learn if fazirsiran reduces other liver injury (inflammation) and the abnormal Z-AAT protein in the liver, to get information on how the body processes fazirsiran (called pharmacokinetics), to test how well fazirsiran works compared with a placebo in improving measures of liver scarring including imaging and liver biomarkers (substances in the blood that the body normally makes and help show if liver function is improving, staying the same, or getting worse) as well as to check for side effects in participants treated with fazirsiran compared with those who received placebo. Participants will either receive fazirsiran or placebo. Liver biopsies, a way of collecting a small tissue sample from the liver, will be taken twice during this study. Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2023 |
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Gabapentin to Reduce Alcohol and Improve Viral Load Suppression
Boston Medical Center
HIV
Heavy Drinking
GRAIL is a Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) among 300 HIV-positive persons with heavy
alcohol consumption (by NIAAA definition) who have had detectable HIV viral load (HVL) at
least 6 months after their HIV diagnosis. This trial aims to test the efficacy of
gabapentin versus placebo to achieve und1 expand
GRAIL is a Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) among 300 HIV-positive persons with heavy alcohol consumption (by NIAAA definition) who have had detectable HIV viral load (HVL) at least 6 months after their HIV diagnosis. This trial aims to test the efficacy of gabapentin versus placebo to achieve undetectable HVL and assess the impact of gabapentin compared to placebo on alcohol consumption, pain severity, ART adherence, and engagement in HIV care. HIV viral load will be assessed at 3 (primary), 6 and 12 months via laboratory test. Eligible participants will be randomly assigned into one of two study arms: 1) gabapentin (1800mg/day target dose) for 3 months vs. 2) placebo for 3 months. All participants will receive evidence-based counseling for alcohol and either an active medication or placebo. Type: Interventional Start Date: Nov 2023 |
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5-Fluorouracil and Calcipotriene for Treatment of Low Grade Skin Cancer
Boston University
Superficial Basal Cell Carcinoma
Squamous Cell Carcinoma in Situ
The investigators will compare the application of two different creams for the treatment
of low-risk skin cancers-superficial basal cell carcinoma (sBCC) and squamous cell
carcinoma in situ (SCCis). 5-Fluorouracil cream is currently FDA approved for the
treatment of superficial basal cell carcinoma1 expand
The investigators will compare the application of two different creams for the treatment of low-risk skin cancers-superficial basal cell carcinoma (sBCC) and squamous cell carcinoma in situ (SCCis). 5-Fluorouracil cream is currently FDA approved for the treatment of superficial basal cell carcinoma and is routinely used by dermatologists across the country and at Boston Medical Center (BMC) for SCCis. The normal treatment regimen is 4 weeks of the 5-fluorouracil cream for both skin cancers. The application of a compounded cream consisting of 1:1 ratio 5-fluorouracil with calcipotriene will be tested. This combination cream has been shown to clear pre-skin cancers called actinic keratoses and prevent future skin cancers from developing. This combination cream for 7-14 days to see if this shorter treatment course provides clearance of the 2 types of skin cancer. This combination cream is successfully used in this manner to treat other subtypes of related skin cancers. This will be a pilot study with The primary endpoint for this pilot randomized single blinded clinical trial will be the response to treatment (yes versus no). The lesions will be assessed clinically for clearance of cancer, as would normally be done and is consistent with how comparable studies have assessed clearance. Participants will be followed closely afterwards for three years with visits at 6 months, which does not vary from standard practice. If the lesions are not clear of cancer or equivocal clinically, the lesions will be re-biopsied and normal standard of care procedure will take place. Type: Interventional Start Date: Oct 2022 |
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Cannabidiol (CBD) in Adults With ASD
Johns Hopkins University
Autism Spectrum Disorder
There are no FDA approved treatments for use in adults with autism spectrum disorder
(ASD), many of whom have distressing anxiety, mood disturbances, sleep problems, and
agitation. Some researchers and individuals with ASD have noted that cannabidiol (CBD) is
beneficial for those psychiatric proble1 expand
There are no FDA approved treatments for use in adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), many of whom have distressing anxiety, mood disturbances, sleep problems, and agitation. Some researchers and individuals with ASD have noted that cannabidiol (CBD) is beneficial for those psychiatric problems. This study is to learn more about the effectiveness and safety of CBD in the treatment of psychiatric problems in adults with ASD. The study will last 14 weeks total, during which six weeks participants will receive a pill containing CBD, two weeks where participants will receive no drug/placebo, and six weeks where participants will receive the placebo, an inactive pill. As part of the study, participants will have regular visits and be asked questions about anxiety, challenging behaviors, daily functioning, cognition, and physical symptoms, on standard assessments. Type: Interventional Start Date: Apr 2023 |
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Using Biomarkers to Help Guide Safe Immunotherapy Discontinuation in Patients With Unresectable Sta1
ECOG-ACRIN Cancer Research Group
Advanced Melanoma
Clinical Stage III Cutaneous Melanoma AJCC v8
Clinical Stage IV Cutaneous Melanoma AJCC v8
Melanoma of Unknown Primary
Pathologic Stage IIIB Cutaneous Melanoma AJCC v8
This phase II trial investigates how well biomarkers on PET/CT imaging drive early
discontinuation of anti-PD-1 therapy in patients with stage IIIB-IV melanoma that cannot
be removed by surgery (unresectable). Anti-PD-1 therapy has become a standard therapy
option for patients with unresectable mel1 expand
This phase II trial investigates how well biomarkers on PET/CT imaging drive early discontinuation of anti-PD-1 therapy in patients with stage IIIB-IV melanoma that cannot be removed by surgery (unresectable). Anti-PD-1 therapy has become a standard therapy option for patients with unresectable melanoma. This trial is being done to determine if doctors can safely shorten the use of standard of care anti-PD1 therapy for melanoma by using biomarkers seen on PET/CT imaging and tumor biopsy. Type: Interventional Start Date: Feb 2021 |
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Intravascular Ultrasound in Patients With End-stage Renal Disease on Dialysis
Boston Medical Center
End Stage Renal Disease
Hemodialysis represents a life line of patients with end stage renal disease, who are
commonly maintained on hemodialysis through catheters. Prolonged exposure to these
catheters eventually damages the walls of veins, which results in stenosis at the local
site. This condition is called central ven1 expand
Hemodialysis represents a life line of patients with end stage renal disease, who are commonly maintained on hemodialysis through catheters. Prolonged exposure to these catheters eventually damages the walls of veins, which results in stenosis at the local site. This condition is called central venous stenosis (CVS) and affects number of patients on hemodialysis in the United States and can compromise the dialysis efficacy. The current diagnostic modality for CVS is venography, which has several limitations. This study proposes to examine intravenous ultrasound (IVUS) as a potentially superior modality, which will provide additional information. Type: Interventional Start Date: Aug 2021 |
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A Randomized Trial to Evaluate Sequential vs Simultaneous Patching
Jaeb Center for Health Research
Amblyopia
A randomized trial to determine whether simultaneous treatment with spectacles and
patching has an equivalent VA outcome compared with sequential treatment, first with
spectacles alone followed by patching (if needed), for previously untreated amblyopia in
children 3 to <13 years of age. expand
A randomized trial to determine whether simultaneous treatment with spectacles and patching has an equivalent VA outcome compared with sequential treatment, first with spectacles alone followed by patching (if needed), for previously untreated amblyopia in children 3 to <13 years of age. Type: Interventional Start Date: Dec 2020 |
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Gathering Records to Evaluate Antiretroviral Treatment-Malawi ( GREAT )
Boston University
HIV
To achieve global goals for the treatment of HIV, most high-prevalence countries are
experimenting with and scaling up differentiated service delivery models (DSD). A handful
of efforts have been formally described and evaluated in the literature; many others are
being implemented formally or infor1 expand
To achieve global goals for the treatment of HIV, most high-prevalence countries are experimenting with and scaling up differentiated service delivery models (DSD). A handful of efforts have been formally described and evaluated in the literature; many others are being implemented formally or informally under routine care, without a research or evaluation goal. For most countries, however, we have little evidence on the big picture-the proportion of clinics offering alternative models, eligibility criteria and the proportion of patients considered eligible, the number of patients actually participating, health outcomes such as viral suppression, empirical resource utilization compared to traditional care, variations among the models, duration of patient participation, fidelity to model guidelines, effects on clinic efficiency, and sustainability without external donor support. AMBIT is a set of data synthesis, data collection, and data analysis activities aimed at generating information for near- and long-term decision making and creating an approach and platform for ongoing evaluation of differentiated models of HIV treatment delivery in the future. The project will collect and analyze a wide range of existing data sets pertinent to DSD. This protocol is for an analysis of existing medical record data collected by the Ministry of Health, implementing partners, and other completed, ongoing, or new evaluations, trials, and observational studies. Outcomes to be reported include coverage/uptake of DSD, patients' outcomes, and distribution of each model. There will be no study interaction with individual patients, providers, caregivers, or others for this analysis. Type: Observational Start Date: Dec 2019 |
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Gathering Records to Evaluate Antiretroviral Treatment-Zambia (GREAT )
Boston University
HIV
To achieve global goals for the treatment of HIV, most high-prevalence countries are
experimenting with and scaling up differentiated service delivery models (DSD). A handful
of efforts have been formally described and evaluated in the literature; many others are
being implemented formally or infor1 expand
To achieve global goals for the treatment of HIV, most high-prevalence countries are experimenting with and scaling up differentiated service delivery models (DSD). A handful of efforts have been formally described and evaluated in the literature; many others are being implemented formally or informally under routine care, without a research or evaluation goal. For most countries, however, there is little evidence on the big picture-the proportion of clinics offering alternative models, eligibility criteria and the proportion of patients considered eligible, the number of patients actually participating, health outcomes such as viral suppression, empirical resource utilization compared to traditional care, variations among the models, duration of patient participation, fidelity to model guidelines, effects on clinic efficiency, and sustainability without external donor support. AMBIT a set of data synthesis, data collection, and data analysis activities aimed at generating information for near- and long-term decision making and creating an approach and platform for ongoing evaluation of differentiated models of HIV treatment delivery in the future. The project will collect and analyze a wide range of existing data sets pertinent to DSD. This protocol is for an analysis of existing medical record data collected by the Ministry of Health, implementing partners, and other completed, ongoing, or new evaluations, trials, and observational studies. Outcomes to be reported include coverage/uptake of DSD, patients' outcomes, and distribution of each model. There will be no study interaction with individual patients, providers, caregivers, or others for this analysis. Type: Observational Start Date: Dec 2019 |
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Gathering Records to Evaluate Antiretroviral Treatment-South Africa
Boston University
HIV
To achieve global goals for the treatment of HIV, most high-prevalence countries are
experimenting with and scaling up differentiated service delivery models (DSD). A handful
of efforts have been formally described and evaluated in the literature; many others are
being implemented formally or infor1 expand
To achieve global goals for the treatment of HIV, most high-prevalence countries are experimenting with and scaling up differentiated service delivery models (DSD). A handful of efforts have been formally described and evaluated in the literature; many others are being implemented formally or informally under routine care, without a research or evaluation goal. For most countries, however, we have little evidence on the big picture-the proportion of clinics offering alternative models, eligibility criteria and the proportion of patients considered eligible, the number of patients actually participating, health outcomes such as viral suppression, empirical resource utilization compared to traditional care, variations among the models, duration of patient participation, fidelity to model guidelines, effects on clinic efficiency, and sustainability without external donor support. AMBIT a set of data synthesis, data collection, and data analysis activities aimed at generating information for near- and long-term decision making and creating an approach and platform for ongoing evaluation of differentiated models of HIV treatment delivery in the future. The project will collect and analyze a wide range of existing data sets pertinent to DSD. This protocol is for an analysis of existing medical record data collected by the Department of Health, implementing partners, and other completed, ongoing, or new evaluations, trials, and observational studies. Outcomes to be reported include coverage/uptake of DSD, patients' outcomes, and distribution of each model. There will be no study interaction with individual patients, providers, caregivers, or others for this analysis. Type: Observational Start Date: Dec 2019 |
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CenteringParenting Clinical Intervention on Kindergarten Readiness in Early Childhood
Boston Medical Center
Parent-Child Relations
Parenting
Child Development
Child Behavior
Disparities in health begin in early childhood. Early life experiences influence brain
development and have significant implications on future health and developmental
outcomes. Low-income children are at greater risk of developmental delays in large part
due to a lack of an enriched environment. D1 expand
Disparities in health begin in early childhood. Early life experiences influence brain development and have significant implications on future health and developmental outcomes. Low-income children are at greater risk of developmental delays in large part due to a lack of an enriched environment. Disparities in early childhood development increase risk for stunted academic achievement throughout the life course. Primary care is a universal exposure in early childhood and therefore is also a significant entry point for promoting optimal child development. There is a need to provide effective, low-cost, and scalable interventions in primary care to support early childhood development.The CenteringParenting intervention is designed to reduce negative health and developmental outcomes within a model of group routine child health care. To date, there is no evidence of the benefits of the CenteringParenting intervention on school readiness, or improvements in parental behaviors that support optimal developmental milestones and achievement. The intent of this study is to determine the effectiveness of the CenteringParenting intervention on school readiness in early childhood, as measured by language development at 24 months, (in addition to health care utilization, child routine care maintenance, parenting stress, caregiver behaviors and attitudes). Type: Interventional Start Date: Feb 2019 |
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Collection of Samples and Clinical Data From Patients With Amyloid Diseases
Boston Medical Center
Multiple Myeloma
RATIONALE: Collecting and storing samples of blood, urine, tissue and data from patients
with amyloid diseases to test in the laboratory may help the study of this disease in the
future.
PURPOSE: This research study is collecting samples from patients with amyloid diseases expand
RATIONALE: Collecting and storing samples of blood, urine, tissue and data from patients with amyloid diseases to test in the laboratory may help the study of this disease in the future. PURPOSE: This research study is collecting samples from patients with amyloid diseases Type: Observational Start Date: Jan 2000 |
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Neuromechanical Mechanisms of Exosuit-assisted Gait Rehabilitation After Stroke
Boston University Charles River Campus
Stroke
Stroke survivors often experience impaired neuromechanical control that limits walking
speed and quality, particularly due to deficits in paretic propulsion. This study aims to
identify patient-specific neuromechanical locomotor control strategies, link them to
biomechanical gait impairments, and i1 expand
Stroke survivors often experience impaired neuromechanical control that limits walking speed and quality, particularly due to deficits in paretic propulsion. This study aims to identify patient-specific neuromechanical locomotor control strategies, link them to biomechanical gait impairments, and investigate how these strategies influence responses to soft robotic exosuit assistance of paretic propulsion and ground clearance during walking. The study focuses on adults who are more than six months post-stroke and have observable gait deficits. The main questions are: 1. How do neuromechanical control patterns (i.e., electromyography-measured muscle coordination) affect walking speed, quality, and gait biomechanics after stroke? 2. Do individuals with distinct neuromechanical patterns respond differently to robotic exosuit-assisted gait rehabilitation? Researchers will compare walking performance without and with robotic exosuit assistance to determine whether tailoring exosuit-assisted gait intervention to patient-specific neuromechanical profiles can lead to greater improvements in walking function. Participants will complete treadmill and overground walking assessments instrumented with motion capture, EMG, and force plates, performing one trial without assistance and two trials with robotic exosuit assistance delivered at different assistance onset timings, from which a preferred assistance setting will be identified. The walking trial associated with the preferred assistance setting will be used for primary analyses. Type: Interventional Start Date: Sep 2025 |
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US Benchmarking Clinical Study
eMyosound SAS
HFpEF - Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction
HFmrEF
ATTR-CM (Transthyretin Amyloid Cardiomyopathy)
Left Ventricular Hypertrophy
Cardiac Amyloidosis
The goal of this observational study is to measure shear wave velocity (SWV) in patients
with non-reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) heart failure and left
ventricular hypertrophy, with or without transthyretin amyloidosis with cardiomyopathy
(ATTR-CM), and in control subjects withou1 expand
The goal of this observational study is to measure shear wave velocity (SWV) in patients with non-reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) heart failure and left ventricular hypertrophy, with or without transthyretin amyloidosis with cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM), and in control subjects without heart failure or cardiomyopathy. The main question it aims to answer is: • Can SWV be used to measure myocardial and liver stiffness in the study's target populations? Researchers will compare patients with ATTR-CM, patients without ATTR-CM, and a control group to determine the distributions of SWV in each population. Participants will: - Have a standard cardiology assessment, including a physical exam, blood work, and an echocardiogram. - Undergo an investigational assessment with the eMyosound LYRA device to measure SWV in their myocardium and liver. - Have the investigational assessment repeated by a second observer to assess measurement reliability. Type: Observational Start Date: Sep 2025 |
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Improving Hypertension Control in Safety-Net Settings: The Boston Hypertension Equity Alliance in T1
Boston Medical Center
Hypertension
Hypertension Complicated
High blood pressure (BP) or hypertension (HTN) affects over 100 million individuals in
the US, increasing the risk of adverse outcomes, including stroke, myocardial infarction
(MI), and chronic kidney disease (CKD). Effective therapies include non-pharmacologic
approaches and multiple medication cl1 expand
High blood pressure (BP) or hypertension (HTN) affects over 100 million individuals in the US, increasing the risk of adverse outcomes, including stroke, myocardial infarction (MI), and chronic kidney disease (CKD). Effective therapies include non-pharmacologic approaches and multiple medication classes. Successful HTN management requires ongoing patient engagement for BP monitoring and treatment intensification. Reaching this goal is challenging, and many patients with HTN do not have controlled BP. Using a collaborative partnership between patients, clinicians, health system and public health stakeholders, and the research team the investigators plan to overcome barriers to widespread implementation of evidence-based health system strategies to improve BP control in a large, urban, primary care-based safety-net setting for diverse populations experiencing disparities in HTN-related outcomes. Type: Interventional Start Date: Sep 2025 |
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A Trial Comparing Screening Mammography With and Without Assistance From Artificial Intelligence fo1
Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
Breast Cancer Screening
Artificial Intelligence (AI)
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare patient-centered outcomes when screening
digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) exams are interpreted with versus without a leading
FDA-cleared artificial intelligence (AI) decision-support tool in real-world U.S.
settings and to assess patients' and radiol1 expand
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare patient-centered outcomes when screening digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) exams are interpreted with versus without a leading FDA-cleared artificial intelligence (AI) decision-support tool in real-world U.S. settings and to assess patients' and radiologists' perspectives on AI in medicine. The main question it aims to answer is: Does an FDA-cleared AI decision-support tool for digital tomosynthesis (DBT) improve screening outcomes in real world US clinical settings? This trial will include all interpreting radiologists and all adult patients undergoing screening mammography at any of the participating breast imaging facilities across 6 regional health systems (University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), University of California, San Diego (UCSD), University of Washington-Seattle, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Boston Medical Center, and University of Miami) during the trial period. All screening mammograms at these facilities will be randomized to either intervention (radiologist assisted by an AI decision support tool) versus usual care (radiologist alone) to see if interpreting these mammograms with the AI tool's assistance improves patient screening outcomes. We are targeting 400,000 screening exams across the participating health systems in this trial. Type: Interventional Start Date: Oct 2025 |
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RISE Versus Advocacy-based Enhanced Care as Usual for Patients Experiencing IPV
Boston University
Intimate Partner Violence (IPV)
This study aims to improve treatment for Veterans Health Administration (VHA) patients
who experience intimate partner violence (IPV). This study will evaluate two brief
counseling interventions for VHA patients who have experienced IPV in the past 12 months:
Recovering from IPV through Strength an1 expand
This study aims to improve treatment for Veterans Health Administration (VHA) patients who experience intimate partner violence (IPV). This study will evaluate two brief counseling interventions for VHA patients who have experienced IPV in the past 12 months: Recovering from IPV through Strength and Empowerment (RISE) and advocacy-based Enhanced Care as Usual (ECAU). The RISE intervention includes up to 8 sessions and includes specific topic areas (e.g., social support, health effects, resources). The other intervention, ECAU, includes a single session that includes supportive education about IPV and health effects, discussion of ways to increase safety, and information about resources. This study will test which approach is better for improving self-efficacy and other aspects of health. Participants will answer surveys about their self-efficacy and other health and safety indicators (e.g., mental health symptoms) right before receiving treatment, approximately 12 weeks later, and then every three months after that for one year. Participation in this research will last about 15 months. Type: Interventional Start Date: Sep 2025 |