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NCT00789958
RATIONALE: Drugs used in chemotherapy, such as capecitabine and gemcitabine, work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells or by stopping them from dividing. Radiation therapy uses high-energy x-rays to kill tumor cells. Specialized radiation therapy that delivers a high dose of radiation directly to the tumor may kill more tumor cells and cause less damage to normal tissue. Giving more than one drug (combination chemotherapy) together with radiation therapy may kill more tumor cells. PURPOSE: This phase II trial is studying how well giving capecitabine together with gemcitabine followed by capecitabine and radiation therapy works in treating patients with cholangiocarcinoma of the gallbladder or bile duct.
NCT01907815
This phase II trial studies how well trametinib and protein kinase B (Akt) inhibitor GSK2141795 work in treating patients with acute myeloid leukemia. Trametinib and Akt inhibitor GSK2141795 may stop the growth of cancer cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth.
NCT01591694
Trauma-informed treatment will improve emotional regulation and behavior.
NCT01505725
Background: \- Researchers have been studying behavioral components of nicotine addiction by looking at how drugs have a reinforcing effect, connecting the stimulation provided by the drug (nicotine) to the behavior that produces it (smoking). Based on previous studies, researchers are interested in learning more about how nicotine affects current smokers' responses to psychological tests and smoking-related cues, and in studying whether certain kinds of genetic background may affect smokers' responses to these kinds of studies. Objectives: * To compare the effect of nicotine versus denicotinized cigarettes during specific psychological tests. * To compare the effects of smoking cues versus neutral cues on craving, mood, and autonomic response. * To study the effect of genes on nicotine reinforcement and smoking-cue reactivity. Eligibility: \- Individuals between 18 and 64 years of age who are current smokers (at least 10 cigarettes per day for at least 1 year) and are not currently interested in reducing their smoking or seeking treatment for tobacco dependence. Design: * Pilot session: * Participants will practice smoking using the measuring equipment that will be used in the study. * After successful practice, participants will read or listen to music for 1 hour, during which they are not allowed to smoke. * After the 1-hour period, participants will sample study cigarettes that have different levels of nicotine, and will be asked to guess whether the cigarettes are normal study cigarettes or denicotinized cigarettes. * Baseline session: * Blood, urine, and breath samples will be taken at the start of the session. * Participants will smoke part of an initial cigarette, and then will read or listen to music for 1 hour, during which they are not allowed to smoke. * After the 1-hour period, participants will give another breath sample and will complete questionnaires about mood and concentration levels. * Trial sessions: * Participants will smoke study cigarettes, and will be asked to either respond to questions about perceived nicotine levels in the cigarettes or press a lever for the chance to be rewarded with additional puffs of the cigarette. After the session, participants will give another breath sample and will complete questionnaires about mood and concentration levels. * Participants will also participate in cue-reactivity sessions to test the body's physiological response to smoking cues (a pack of cigarettes) and neutral cues (a pack of unsharpened pencils). After the session, participants will complete questionnaires on mood and concentration 15, 30, 45, and 60 minutes after the session. * At the conclusion of the last experimental session, participants will discuss the study with researchers, and may receive a referral list of smoking treatment programs.
NCT01678833
Background: Although some treatments for substance abuse are considered effective for some people who are drug dependent, many others do not benefit as much over time. Researchers are working to find out what characteristics predict treatment response. They also want to determine how to design treatments that are more effective for a greater number of substance abusers. This pilot study involves providing drug addicts with cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), a treatment considered to be one of the most effective in reducing substance-abuse, to identify ways in which the brain works that may predict and explain treatment effects. A comparison group will be included that receives only standard psychotherapy or talk therapy. This approach will enable researchers to determine what factors might be interfering with favorable treatment outcomes and how to refine or develop new treatments that work well for more people. Objectives: \- To identify individual characteristics which predict and explain the effects of CBT in people with opiate dependence. Eligibility: * Males between 18 and 60 years of age who are dependent on opioids (such as heroin). * Participants must be willing to take buprenorphine and receive substance abuse counseling. Design: * Participants will be screened with a physical exam and medical history. * Researchers will ask questions about participants ability to cope in certain situations, along with questions about drug use and lifestyle issues. These questions will be asked twice, before and after completing treatment. * Participants will be placed into one of two groups. One group will have CBT twice a week for 8 weeks. The other group will have standard counseling twice per week. Both groups will take buprenorphine as part of the drug abuse treatment. * Participants will have other tests during this study. They will have imaging studies to look at brain function. These studies will test thinking and decision making.
NCT01867359
Background: \- Researchers are interested in learning more about dementia and its causes. They want to look at the genetic basis of dementia. Identifying genetic aspects of dementia may help provide better tests and treatments for it. It may also show rare gene variants that can cause or alter a person's risks for developing dementia. This study will look at people who have dementia, their family members, and healthy volunteers. Objectives: \- To study genetic influences on dementia. Eligibility: * Individuals who have been diagnosed with dementia. * Family members of individuals who have been diagnosed with dementia. * Healthy volunteers at least 18 years of age. Design: * Participants will be interviewed and answer questions about their medical history. They will also provide general information on the relatives' medical histories. * Participants will provide a blood sample for genetic testing. * Participants will remain on the study for up to 10 years. They will have regular visits to monitor their brain health and function. * Treatment will not be provided as part of this study.
NCT03139097
This study will establish reference range intervals for the Quantra System, a next-generation diagnostic platform that provides whole blood coagulation testing at the point-of-care.
NCT00618631
Background: * Tobacco smoking is one of the most preventable causes of morbidity and mortality in the world, but the addictive property of nicotine is such that fewer than 10 percent of people who attempt to quit smoking remain tobacco-free after 1 year. Researchers are studying the addictive properties of nicotine in an attempt to develop more successful medication therapies for smoking cessation. * Nicotine acts on chemical receptors in the brain, including opioid receptors that affect the perception of pain. Repeated nicotine administration can cause adaptations in the brain s opioid receptors, which heightens the addictive properties of nicotine and increases the likelihood and severity of withdrawal symptoms associated with smoking cessation. Researchers are interested in using positron emission tomography (PET) scanning to study brain chemical responses to nicotine in current smokers and nonsmokers. Objectives: * To study brain chemical activity related to cigarette smoking and nicotine administration. * To compare the brain chemical activity of current daily smokers with that of nonsmokers. Eligibility: \- Individuals 21 to 50 years of age who are either current smokers (10 to 25 cigarettes daily for at least 2 years) or have had some exposure to tobacco but have never smoked regularly (may have had a maximum of 20 cigarettes in their lifetime and none in past year). Design: * Eligible participants will undergo initial medical and psychological screening and neuropsychological testing before beginning the main phase of the study. Participants will be required to abstain from alcohol and drugs (except caffeine, nicotine, and prescription drugs) for 24 hours before each session, and smokers will refrain from smoking after midnight on the night before each session. * Session 1: Participants will answer questions about nicotine craving and withdrawal symptoms, followed by a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan to provide baseline information about brain activity. * Session 2 and 3: Participants will answer questions about nicotine craving and withdrawal symptoms, and then will smoke one cigarette (either active nicotine or placebo). Researchers will document participants consumption of the cigarette. After the cigarette is smoked, participants will have a PET scan. Blood samples will be drawn during the PET session.
NCT01273311
Background: \- The Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study is an investigation of cardiovascular risk factors among African-American and white young adults between 18 and 30 years of age, first recruited in 1985 86 from Birmingham, AL; Chicago, IL; Minneapolis, MN; and Oakland, CA. The study has examined a wide variety of risk factors, including insulin resistance, obesity, and diabetes. Based on 20 years of followup, the data provide evidence of an increase in the prevalence of many cardiovascular risk factors, as well as other factors that may lead to brain disease. To further evaluate these changes, the CARDIA Year 25 Exam will include a brain imaging component to study brain structure and function in a subset of CARDIA participants. Objectives: \- To conduct brain magnetic resonance imaging as part of a 25-year followup study on participants in the original CARDIA study of heart disease risk factors in young adults. Eligibility: \- Existing CARDIA study participants in the Minneapolis, MN, and Oakland, CA regions. Design: * Participants will be screened with a full medical history and physical examination. - Participants will have an MRI scan at the 25-year followup examination for the CARDIA study. * No additional testing or treatment will be required for this protocol.
NCT01888978
Patient therapy is tailored according to the molecular profile of the patient's tumor.
NCT01160458
Background: Background: \- IMC-A12, a new cancer treatment that has not yet been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, is an antibody that is designed to block the effects of a protein called Type I Insulin-Like Growth Factor (IGF-1R). IMC-A12 blocks the receptors in cells that respond to IGF-1R, which are thought to play an important role in helping cancer cells to grow and divide. Researchers are interested in determining whether IMC-A12 is an effective treatment for individuals who have mesothelioma that has not responded to standard chemotherapy. Objectives: \- To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of IMC-A12 treatment in individuals with mesothelioma who have previously had chemotherapy. Eligibility: \- Individuals at least 18 years of age who have been diagnosed with mesothelioma that has not responded to chemotherapy. Design: * Eligible participants will be screened with a full physical examination and medical history, blood and urine samples, and imaging studies. * Participants will receive IMC-A12 once every 3 weeks (21-day cycle), and will be evaluated before the start of each new cycle with blood tests and imaging studies if needed. * Treatment cycles will continue for as long as needed, unless severe side effects develop or the disease progresses.
NCT01437033
Background: \- Some types of cancer, like cancer of the esophagus, are difficult to detect at an early stage. A possible detection method involves collecting breath samples to look for chemicals that may be signs of cancer. However, more research is needed to determine how different chemicals appear in different breath samples. This study will involve healthy volunteers. Objectives: \- To study chemicals appearing in breath samples of healthy volunteers. Eligibility: \- Healthy volunteers between 30 and 60 years of age. Design: * Participants will fast overnight (midnight to morning) and then provide two breath samples taken 5 minutes apart. * Breath samples will be collected on days 1, 49, and 98 of the study
NCT01611402
Background: \- Tuberculosis (TB) infection is particularly deadly when it happens in people who are also infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). However, not much is known about how these two infections affect each other. Some people who have HIV or TB infections develop health problems after they start taking either HIV or TB medications or both. These drugs can improve the body s ability to fight infections, but sometimes this sudden improvement can make the infected person initially become sicker. Researchers want to study how these infections affect the immune system and the gene expression of people who have TB and may or may not have HIV, to see if there is a pattern of gene expression that may predict whether people starting treatment may get sicker initially. Objectives: \- To study the gene expression and immune systems of people with TB who may or may not also have HIV. Eligibility: * Adults at least 18 years of age who have tuberculosis. * Participants will be drawn from study sites in the United States and China. Design: * Participants will be divided into three study groups. The first group will have TB but not HIV. The second group will have both TB and HIV that have not been treated. The third group will have both TB and HIV that are currently being treated. * All participants will have a single study visit. Blood samples will be collected at this visit. A medical history will also be collected. * No treatment will be provided as part of this study.
NCT00001426
A supra-additive cytotoxic effect was seen when CAI and paclitaxel were given to human ovarian cancer cells sequentially in tissue culture. We have demonstrated that CAI given for 8 days followed by paclitaxel is reasonably well tolerated and that paclitaxel administration causes a dose-dependent increase in CAI plasma concentration. CAI is a cytostatic drug and continuous exposure is needed. This study will evaluate the combination of continuously administered CAI with three-weekly paclitaxel.
NCT00257907
This study will examine how the immune system responds to infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacteria (bacteria that cause tuberculosis) in order to better understand how the germ produces infection and how the immune response might work to control the infection. Only about one in 10 people infected by M. tuberculosis become sick, sometimes years or even decades after exposure. It is not known why some people become sick and most do not, but the immune system of people who never develop disease may be better able to control the bacteria. This study will evaluate the latent form of M. tuberculosis infection to further the understanding of the immune mechanisms - particularly the role of certain white blood cells - involved in the disease process. Healthy volunteers 18 years of age and older may be eligible for this study. Candidates are screened with a medical history, family history of medical conditions, sexual history, history of drug use, physical examination and blood tests, including a test for HIV. People in Mali, West Africa, and in local health clinics in the United States may participate. At the start of the study, participants have blood tests and a tuberculin skin test (PPD test), which indicates whether a person has been exposed to tuberculosis bacteria. For the PPD, a tiny amount of liquid containing dead tuberculosis antigen is put under the skin of the forearm with a needle. The antigen cannot cause infection or disease. After 3 days, participants have another blood test and the site of the tuberculin test is examined for swelling that would indicate a positive result. Participants with a positive PPD have a chest x-ray to check for tuberculosis disease. Those whose x-ray is also positive are withdrawn from the study and referred to their doctor for evaluation and treatment. Those whose x-ray is negative return to the clinic within 3 weeks of the tuberculin test to give another blood sample. Participants whose PPD is negative have a second tuberculin test 10 to 21 days later and return 3 days after the test to determine if it is still negative or if it is positive. (Some people who are negative after the first test may test positive after the second procedure.) Those whose test is still negative end their participation in the study at that time. Participants whose second PPD is positive have a chest x-ray as described above, and those with a negative chest x-ray return in 3 weeks to donate one last blood sample. The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the latent form of this infection, the prevalence of which worldwide exceeds that of active disease. Our hypothesis is that in latent tuberculosis antigen specific effector memory CD4+ T cells are responsible for the generation of clinically measurable delayed type hypersensitivity and that central memory CD4+T cells are not directly involved in this process. We base this idea on the assumption that latent tuberculosis is a state of antigen persistence and that effector memory T cells should be maintained as long as antigen/infection is present. We propose to conduct this study in Mali, West Africa and local clinics in the U.S. Tuberculosis affects 593/100,000(2) individuals in Mali and most have been exposed to the disease. Additionally it would be important to evaluate the same parameters locally as latent infection is one of the major factors for reactivation tuberculosis in this country. Patients would be enrolled in 4 major groups: HIV-/TST- (Group A), HIV-/TST+ (Group B), HIV+/TST+(G roup C) and HIV+/TST- (Group D). To evaluate this hypothesis we plan to enroll between 100 - 300 patients over the course of 2 years from both countries. Blood samples before and at predetermined time points after the application of Purified Protein Derivative (PPD) will be obtained to determine the fraction of CD4+ T cells which produce interferon gamma in response to stimulation with PPD with a 16hr antigen stimulation assay. Appropriate staining will be done to ascertain the phenotype as well as cytokine production (Interferon gamma,( IFN gamma), Interleukin 2 (IL2) and Tumour Necrosis Factor ( TNF)). Additionally lymphocyte proliferation will be studied using 5-(and-6)-carboxyflouorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester (CFSE.) In conducting this study we hope to further the understanding of the immune mechanisms involved, particularly mechanisms of T cell memory, which would provide insights into TB and HIV pathogenesis. We also believe that understanding these mechanisms could lead towards establishment of surrogates for immunity in TB vaccine studies, which could enhance vaccine trial design. It might also help in understanding better the immunological dynamics of tuberculosis co-infection in individuals with HIV infection.
NCT02400164
The study is a multi-center, prospective, open label, uncontrolled feasibility study enrolling 30 patients with refractory or recurrent ascites and cirrhosis at up to 6 sites. Patients will be enrolled during a 6 month enrollment phase after which data will be collected for 12months with an initial analysis after 3 months. Extended follow-up for safety monitoring purposes will continue for the lifetime of the patient or until the device is explanted.
NCT00612768
Open, prospective, multi-center study to evaluate the bioequivalence of povidone (PVP) formulations of 2 T.R.U.E. TEST allergens: fragrance mix and thimerosal.
NCT01875705
This is an open-label, multicenter, dose-escalation study to assess the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of GDC-0994 in patients with locally advanced or metastatic solid tumors. Patients will be enrolled in one of two stages: a dose-escalation stage (Stage I) or the subsequent expansion stage (Stage II). Stage I will evaluate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of increasing doses of GDC-0994 administered daily. Stage II will gather additional data on safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of the recommended dose of GDC-0994 determined in Stage I.
NCT00640250
We propose a prospective, multi-center, double-blind, randomized study comparing the diagnostic performance (primary) and safety (secondary) of 3 concentrations of Disperse blue 106 and 4 concentrations of Bronopol in 40 adult subjects (20 subjects per allergen) with a clinical history of contact dermatitis and a positive patch test (current or previous) to the corresponding reference petrolatum allergen ("sensitives").
NCT02558829
The Macimorelin Growth Hormone Stimulation Test (GHST) will be compared with the Insulin Tolerance Test (ITT) in an open-label, randomized, 2-way crossover Trial. The trial will include subjects suspected to have adult growth hormone deficiency (AGHD) and a group of healthy control subjects.