Plessala, France
- Featured
A Study to Investigate The Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of RO7486967 in Participants With Early Idiopathic Parkinson's Disease
Phase
1Span
128 weeksSponsor
Hoffmann-La RocheLondon, London
Recruiting
- Featured
Phase 1/2 Study Of Intratumoral G100 With Or Without Pembrolizumab or Rituximab In Patients With Follicular Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma
See CT.gov: **[**www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02501473**](https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02501473?term=G142&rank=1)**
Phase
1/2Span
Sponsor
London, London
Recruiting
Screening for Asymptomatic Coronary Artery Disease in Kidney Transplant Candidates
Cardiovascular disease is the commonest cause of death while on the kidney transplant waiting list and after transplantation. Current standard care involves screening for coronary artery disease prior to waitlist entry, then every 1-2 years, according to perceived risk, until transplanted. The aim of screening is two-fold. Firstly to identify patients with asymptomatic coronary disease to enable either correction, by bypass surgery or angioplasty, or removal of the patient from the list, with the ultimate aim of preventing premature cardiovascular mortality at the time of, or soon after kidney transplantation. Secondly, from a societal perspective, to prevent mis-direction of scarce donor organs into recipients who experience early mortality. This current screening strategy is not evidence based, has substantial known and potential harms, and is very costly. Two major issues of uncertainty require addressing in sequence: (1) whether to periodically screen asymptomatic wait-listed patients for occult coronary artery disease; and (2) whether to revascularise coronary stenoses in asymptomatic patients prior to transplantation. The CARSK study seeks to address the first of these 2 issues. CARSK aims to 1. Test the hypothesis that after screening for wait list entry, no further screening for coronary artery disease (CAD) is non-inferior to the current standard care which is screening all asymptomatic wait-listed patients for CAD at regular intervals. 2. Compare the benefits and costs of not screening versus regular CAD screening from a health system perspective.
Phase
N/ASpan
370 weeksSponsor
University of British ColumbiaBrixton
Recruiting
A Study to Evaluate the Effectiveness and Safety of Dysport® for the Prevention of Chronic Migraine in Adults
Phase
3Span
167 weeksSponsor
IpsenBrixton
Recruiting