Loading clinical trials...
Discover 22,668 clinical trials near New York, New York. Find research studies in your area.
Browse by condition:
Showing 15581-15600 of 22,668 trials
NCT02091362
The main purpose of the trial is to determine the effect of a study drug known as LY2409021 on blood pressure and pulse rate in participants with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) when compared to placebo. The study has two periods. Each participant will receive LY2409021 or placebo in each period. At least 4 weeks will pass between periods. The study will last about 23 weeks for each participant. Participants may remain on stable dose metformin, as prescribed by their personal physician.
NCT00520741
The objective of this historical-controlled trial is to demonstrate the efficacy and safety of conversion to Lacosamide monotherapy in subjects with Partial-onset Seizures who are withdrawn from 1 to 2 marketed antiepileptic drugs.
NCT00530855
This open-label extension trial will assess the long-term use of Lacosamide monotherapy and safety of Lacosamide monotherapy and adjunctive therapy in subjects with partial-onset seizures who were previously enrolled in the conversion to monotherapy trial (SP902).
NCT01690494
This study is a randomized controlled trial (RCT) that will rigorously evaluate the implementation, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a couple-based integrated human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and drug abuse prevention intervention (Connect II) with drug-involved male offenders charged with misdemeanors and their primary female sexual partners, implemented by frontline providers in Criminal Court, Community Court or probation (CCP) sites in NYC, compared to CCP standard treatment of care services (TAU). The primary outcomes are to reduce sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and increase condom use.
NCT03449823
Twin-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) is a complication affecting 10-15% of monochorionic, diamniotic (MCDA) twin pregnancies. Unevenly distributed blood flow across a shared placental circulation results in a volume-restricted donor twin and a volume-overloaded recipient twin, and TTTS has high perinatal morbidity and mortality without treatment. Differential donor and recipient findings in TTTS can be observed upon ultrasound evaluation. TTTS is classified according to the Quintero staging system, which evaluates amniotic fluid volumes, fetal bladders, Doppler study of the umbilical artery and ductus venosus, and for the presence of hydrops or death. However, due to seemingly complex and variable disease pathophysiology, the Quintero system cannot predict outcomes on a case-by-case basis. Prior studies have associated fetal renal artery Doppler ultrasound measurements with amniotic fluid volume in singleton pregnancies. In fetuses with placental insufficiency, adaptive circulatory changes maintain adequate oxygen delivery to vital organs such as the heart, brain, and adrenals, with a consequent deprivation to splanchnic organs. In the fetal kidney, as vascular resistance increases during hypoxia, renal perfusion decreases proportionately. These changes are reflected in renal artery Doppler findings. As these same adaptations are believed to occur in donor twins, renal artery Doppler studies may also be of value in the TTTS evaluation. This study plans to perform renal artery Doppler assessments in MCDA twins complicated by TTTS, and compare them to measurements in gestational-age equivalent MCDA twins without TTTS. If findings differ significantly, it would support further investigation into the use of renal artery Doppler studies for the evaluation of complicated MCDA twins.
NCT01970852
The aim of this study is to evaluate the impact of an inpatient personal health record (PHR) portal intervention within the hospital environment. The intervention hopes to improve patient engagement with their care and to measure patient activation and satisfaction. Additional clinical measure (e.g. number of adverse events that occur during the stay, changes to medication orders, etc.) will also be studied. Characterization of hospital patient and clinician attitudes towards patient engagement will also be formalized.
NCT00463060
Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the United States, with approximately 90% of deaths resulting from patients with metastatic spread. Save for notable exceptions such as testicular cancer, chemotherapy alone cannot cure patients with metastases. Some patients with limited metastatic deposits (most commonly colon cancer spread to the liver) can be cured with surgery followed by chemotherapy. Therefore, some patients with metastases should be considered for aggressive local therapy (surgery and/or radiation). Even though chemotherapy has improved significantly, patients treated with conventional chemotherapy and/or biologically targeted therapy are not cured of their disease. For the most common types of cancer, chemotherapy alone can shrink or stabilize tumors for an average of 6 months before the tumors regrow. Both chemotherapy and biologically targeted therapy have major limitations preventing cure of these patients. Radiation therapy is an effective modality of treating cancer. Until recently, radiation for metastases was used only to relieve symptoms resulting from local tumor growth. Technological advances, including stereotactic radiotherapy, allow for radiation to be more precisely delivered to the tumor while sparing nearby normal organs. Stereotactic radiotherapy can completely eradicate local tumors with minimal side effects. Stereotactic radiotherapy has never been combined with drug therapy. Sutent is a new F.D.A. approved cancer therapy that targets tumor blood vessels. It is effective against two types of cancer that rarely respond to chemotherapy (GI stromal tumors and kidney cancer). We propose combining biologically targeted drug therapy with physically targeted stereotactic radiotherapy. Our goal is to determine if this is a safe regimen and the best method of combining these treatments. Ultimately, our goal is to cure some patients with previously incurable metastatic cancer with this combination.
NCT00527735
The purpose of the study is to determine whether ipilimumab given with paclitaxel/carboplatin has clinical benefit when compared with paclitaxel/carboplatin alone in patients with previously untreated lung cancer.
NCT00161564
The purpose of this research study is to compare the efficacy and safety of higher doses of rituximab to a combination of standard doses of Rituxan + CVP (Cyclophosphamide, Vincristine, and Prednisone) in patients with chronic Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP who did not respond to or relapsed after standard doses of rituximab.
NCT00552305
The purpose of this trial is to determine whether lacosamide is safe and effective for long-term use in patients with partial-seizures from epilepsy.
NCT01118949
The purpose is to assess the safety of Lacosamide in subjects with uncontrolled Primary Generalized Tonic-Clonic (PGTC) seizures with Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy.
NCT00910247
This is a long term, open-label, safety extension study in subjects with partial onset seizures.
NCT01672814
This study compares the outcomes of the Vedera KXS procedure (a microwave-based procedure, also known as Keraflex) combined with corneal collagen crosslinking to corneal collagen crosslinking alone for the treatment of keratoconus. The goal is to improve corneal shape in patients with keratoconus.
NCT02982018
Randomized, 8-visit dispensing study over 14 weeks to evaluate the safety and efficacy of an investigational contact lens with a new UV blocker compared to a marketed contact lens.
NCT01006252
The primary purpose of this study was to see how tasisulam-sodium affected metastatic melanoma when compared against paclitaxel as measured by overall survival.
NCT01848184
The objective of this study is to assess the recurrence rate following the use of PARIETEX™ Composite Ventral Patch in primary ventral hernia repair by open approach with intra-peritoneal positioning.
NCT02987504
This is a multicenter, open-label, dose-escalation, Phase 1 study of intravenous (IV) samalizumab to determine its maximum tolerated dose (MTD), overall safety/tolerability, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic parameters, and efficacy in participants with advanced cancer. The study was terminated for administrative reasons and not due to any safety concerns.
NCT00819585
The 24-week, dose-ranging, multi-center, double-blind, double-dummy, active-controlled core study investigated the prophylactic effect of canakinumab on the signs and symptoms of acute flares in chronic gout patients initiating allopurinol therapy. The core study was followed by a 24-week open-label, multicenter extension study to assess the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of canakinumab in patients with gout who were given canakinumab at the time of gout flare.
NCT03394677
This is a multi-center, randomized, vehicle controlled, double-blind Phase 2 study in pediatric patients age 2-17 years old with mild to moderate atopic dermatitis.
NCT00668148
This multicenter study will enroll approximately 185 participants with metastatic or advanced sarcoma, to assess the effectiveness and safety of IMC-A12 monotherapy for this indication. Participants will be stratified into five tiers according to diagnosis: 1. Ewing's sarcoma/peripheral neuroectodermal tumor (PNET) 2. rhabdomyosarcoma 3. leiomyosarcoma 4. adipocytic sarcoma 5. synovial sarcoma. A total of 85 participants will be enrolled initially, 17 in each tier. Participants will receive single agent IMC-A12 every 2 weeks. A treatment cycle will be defined as 6 weeks, with radiological evaluation at every cycle. Safety and response in the initial 17 participants in each tier will be used to determine whether to extend enrollment to the target total of 37 participants per tier.