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Showing 1-20 of 183 trials
NCT07166172
This registry study aims to confirm that FETO increases neonatal survival to discharge and reduces long-term morbidity in fetuses with isolated left CDH and o/e LHR \< 30%, or isolated right CDH and o/e LHR ≤ 45%, compared to those receiving standard care. This prospective registry plans to enroll 80 pregnant women (40 treatment/40 control) with fetuses diagnosed with isolated CDH, and the children will be followed for up to 24 months.
NCT07546227
This study is a single center randomized controlled trial evaluating the effect of an exercise training intervention (interval training or moderate continuous training) compared to usual care (no training) on exercise capacity in patients with congenital heart disease (CHD). Our primary aim is to determine the impact of interval training (IT) compared to moderate continuous exercise training (MCT) versus controls (no exercise) on exercise capacity as measured by peak VO2. Secondary aims are to: 1) assess the safety of exercise training in CHD, 2) evaluate the effect of exercise training on cardiac structure and function and 3) assess the effects of exercise training on quality of life and long-term physical activity.
NCT07288580
This study is a multicenter, single-arm, open-label Phase I/II clinical trial, which is designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability and efficacy of EHT102 injection in treating congenital hearing loss secondary to biallelic mutations of OTOF (DFNB9).Up to 30 pediatric participants (A maximum of 15 participants will be enrolled in each of the United States and China) will be enrolled and dosed with EHT102. The dose-escalation phase (Phase I) includes two predefined dose cohorts (3 participants per cohort), with sequential enrollment from low to high dose. During dose escalation, each participant will receive a unilateral EHT102 injection followed by safety observation.
NCT07526662
This is a prospective observational cohort study conducted at Beijing Anzhen Hospital. The study aims to establish reference ranges of heart sound and electrocardiogram (ECG) parameters for both mothers and fetuses. It seeks to develop early warning models for maternal adverse cardiac events, fetal congenital heart disease progression, and autoimmune-related fetal heart block, thereby building a comprehensive maternal-fetal integrated risk stratification system.
NCT02138708
The purpose of this study is to assess the predictive performance of the pulmonary vascular reactivity to acetylcholine, in the presence pulmonary arterial hypertension (estimated 1 year after the closure of the shunt).
NCT06690151
Congenital heart defects (CHD), as the leading cause of birth defects, affect 12 million people globally and approximately 41,000 newborns each year in Europe. CHD presents a significant public health concern due to its association with high morbidity and mortality rates across the lifespan. Over 50% of infants born with critical CHD will develop neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD), requiring specialized care and impacting their quality of life. NDDs, involving early and persistent disruptions in cognitive, emotional, and behavioral development due to abnormal brain development, are highly variable. They may impact language, learning, motor skills, intellectual efficiency, social cognition, attention, memory, and executive functions, often accompanied by psychosocial difficulties. These hidden disabilities constitute the primary long-term sequelae of CHD, surpassing even cardiovascular complications in impact, and affect children who often undergo multiple cardiac surgeries during early childhood. NDDs are associated not only with complex CHDs but also with simpler CHDs that are repaired in early childhood and considered 'cured.' The origin of CHD-associated NDDs remains largely unknown. While few genetic or environmental causes have been identified, recent research suggests a possible common origin linking heart malformations and neurodevelopmental abnormalities. The CATAMARAN neonatal cohort project aims to detect developmental delays associated with CHD as early as six months of age and to identify both individual susceptibility factors and acquired vulnerabilities contributing to the development of NDDs in infants with CHD.
NCT07479654
The goal of this three-year mixed-methods observational study with an embedded randomized controlled trial is to develop and validate a frailty risk prediction model and evaluate an artificial intelligence-based voice emotion detection-guided counselling intervention in adults with congenital heart disease (ACHD). The main questions it aims to answer are: Are symptom clusters associated with frailty and psychological outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease? Can symptom clusters and psychosocial factors be used to predict frailty risk over time in ACHD patients? Does an AI-based voice emotion detection-guided counselling intervention improve psychological outcomes, fatigue, and quality of life among high-risk ACHD patients? Researchers will compare ACHD patients receiving AI-based voice emotion detection-guided counselling with those receiving usual care to determine whether the intervention reduces depression, anxiety, sleep disturbance, fatigue, and frailty risk, and improves grit and quality of life. Participants will: Complete longitudinal assessments of symptom clusters, frailty, and psychological status at baseline and follow-up time points Participate in qualitative interviews to explore lived experiences related to symptoms and frailty Receive AI-based voice emotion detection-guided counselling (intervention group only in Year 3)
NCT07477197
A repository of biospecimens and detailed phenotypic information collected longitudinally from adults with congenital heart disease and related conditions, with an aim to facilitate future research on biologic mechanisms of underlying disease, compensation and deterioration; biologic correlates of patient experience and functional status; associations between clinical characteristics and various biomarkers; and predictors of clinical outcomes.
NCT07457385
The Investigator hypothesize that the treatment efficacy will be similar in both study arms. Secondary outcomes and endpoints will characterize safety by comparing adverse events (AEs), tolerability, and adherence to therapy in each arm. This is a Phase 4, open-label, multicenter trial designed to evaluate the efficacy of a single injected dose of intramuscular (IM) BPG (Arm 1) compared to oral amoxicillin administered twice daily (BID) for 10 days (Arm 2). The study will involve infants aged ≤ 30 days old with suspected untreated syphilis. The trial will be conducted at 12 sites across the U.S., enrolling approximately 374 participants. Upon randomization, participants will undergo baseline study sample collection (blood, oropharyngeal, and nasal mucosal swabs for PCR testing) and then receive either treatment with oral amoxicillin or IM BPG, both with directly observed therapy. The participant enrolled in the optional pharmacokinetic (PK) sub-study will have additional blood samples collected for PK analysis within the first 24-48 hours after treatment. Participants will be discharged from the hospital following routine procedures, with the oral amoxicillin dosing continued at home (BID) by the caregiver.
NCT04322435
Children with congenital primary and secondary adrenal insufficiency, who are deficient in cortisol, are at risk for hypoglycaemia, irrespective of appropriate hydrocortisone treatment, which can lead to potentially serious neurological complications. Few series are described in pediatrics. The prevalence of hypoglycaemia is probably underestimated because it is often asymptomatic and capillary blood glucose monitoring is not always performed routinely. The objective of the study is to evaluate the prevalence of hypoglycaemia in children with adrenal insufficiency.
NCT05394506
Mutations in the LMNA gene, which codes for lamins A and C, proteins of the nuclear lamina, are responsible for a wide spectrum of pathologies, including a group specifically affecting striated skeletal and cardiac muscles, with cardiac involvement being life-threatening. At the skeletal muscle level, a wide phenotypic spectrum has been described, ranging from severe forms of congenital muscular dystrophy to less severe forms of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy. The great clinical variability of striated muscle laminopathies, both inter- and intra-familial, can be observed in the age of onset, severity of signs and progression of muscle and heart involvement. To date, more than 400 LMNA mutations have been associated with striated muscle laminopathies (www.umd.be/LMNA/), highlighting strong clinical and genetic heterogeneity. A few recurrent mutations linked to a difference in severity have been identified. However, these genotype-phenotype relationships and the rare cases of digenism reported do not explain all the clinical variability of laminopathies. Therefore, there are probably other factors of severity than the causative mutation, called "modifier genes". Identification of such modifier genes has been initiated by studying a large family with significant clinical variability in the age of onset of muscle signs. A segregation analysis within this family identified 2 potential modifier loci. High-throughput sequencing restricted to these 2 regions according to phenotypic subgroups did not led to meaningful results so far. In addition, an international retrospective study of the natural history of early muscle laminopathies has allowed the investigators to highlight a strong inter-family clinical variability in patients carrying recurrent mutations. The investigators thus have strong preliminary data that could allow them to identify modifying genetic factors in a cohort of patients carrying a mutation in the LMNA gene. In order to identify these factors that modulate the clinical severity of laminopathies, the investigators wish to collect biological material (muscle and/or skin biopsies) from patients carrying a mutation in the LMNA gene. The study of this biological material using multi OMICs technics will allow the investigators to identify and functionally validate the action of these modifying genes. OMIICs is a set of techniques for characterising biological molecules using high-throughput approaches such as DNA sequencing, RNA sequencing and/or chromatin conformation (ATACseq...), proteins.
NCT03281798
The purpose of the study is to study the outcomes of maternal and fetal patients who are undergoing fetal intervention for severe isolated lower urinary tract obstruction (LUTO).
NCT07408583
The investigators aim to evaluate the safety and efficacy of in utero hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (IUHSCT) for the treatment of fetuses diagnosed with Fanconi anemia (FA) during pregnancy.
NCT06809049
The goal of this interventional study is to demonstrate the feasibility and tolerability of music and movement intervention for children with congenital DM1, while providing indications of its effectiveness in improving brain and heart symptoms of DM1. Additionally, information from the collection of biological samples and wearable devices (accelerometer, EEG headband and ECG chest strap) will be used to identify brain-heart biomarkers and outcome measures for use in future research and trials. Researchers will compare the results of physical and cognitive assessments for each participant to assessments from baseline after 10 weeks of weekly music sessions. Qualitative measures (questionnaires and focus groups) will inform the feasibility of this intervention for this population. The main questions this study aims to answer are: * Are weekly music education sessions feasible for children with DM1? * Are weekly music education sessions tolerable for children with DM1? Participants will: * Attend 45-minute-long music sessions once weekly for 10 weeks. * Attend two clinic visits for cognitive and physical assessments. * Provide blood, saliva, stool and urine samples. * Use wearable devices both at-home and during music sessions. * Parents/caregivers of participants will complete questionnaires and participate in three focus groups. Progression from feasibility study to a full-scale clinical trial will be informed by four progression criteria: 1. The feasibility of attendance, as assessed by attendance rate to 10 music sessions (≥ 60%) 2. Feasibility of attendance, as rated by parents/caregivers of participants (≥60% rate "extremely" or "very" practical to attend) 3. Attrition rate of the study, as determined by percentage of participants who complete the study (≥ 60%) 4. Overall satisfaction, as rated by parents/caregivers of participants (≥60% rate "very satisfied" or "satisfied")
NCT06932081
This real-world, international registry aims to evaluate the current experience with sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) in adult congenital heart disease (ACHD) patients by investigating the prescription patterns, safety, tolerability, and potential beneficial effects on heart failure-related outcomes.
NCT06711666
Congenital heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of congenital malformations, representing 1% of live births. Progress in surgical care have led to the dramatic increase in the population of children and adults living with heart disease. As survival is no longer a concern, long-term outcomes have become the major public health issue. Prenatal diagnosis of CHD requiring open-heart surgery can be a traumatic event for expecting mothers and fathers. In the general population, maternal mental health distress is associated with fetal disturbances in the hypothalamic-adrenal-pituitary system axis, restricted intrauterine growth and adverse outcomes in the offspring. It is unknown whether prenatal maternal psychological distress have an impact on neurodevelopmental outcomes in CHD. Our national study seeks to (1) characterize the impact of prenatal maternal psychological distress on neurodevelopmental outcomes at age 1 for children with CHD who undergo neonatal open-heart surgery; (2) investigate the sociodemographic and medical determinants associated with prenatal maternal mental health of women carrying a foetus diagnosed with complex CHD; (3) explore the mediating role of prenatal risk factors (i.e., sociodemographic, medical and maternal coping mechanisms) in the association of prenatal maternal mental health (i.e., distress, anxiety and depression) and neurodevelopment in children with CHD; and (4) explore the impact of paternal or the co-parent's mental health impact on neurodevelopmental outcomes at age 1 in children with CHD. This study is a non-interventional, prospective, and longitudinal study of prenatal maternal mental health and subsequent child's neurodevelopmental and behavioural outcomes. It includes a follow-up period from the 3rd trimester of pregnancy until the child's first year of life. It will include children with a prenatally diagnosed heart defect requiring open-heart surgery within the first weeks of life. Understanding and preventing the neurodevelopmental sequelae of heart disease diagnosed in-utero is a public health priority.
NCT06937242
The goal of this study is to find out if using microprocessor-controlled prosthetic knees (MPKs), prosthetic knees with a built-in computer, improves health outcomes related to falls in adults who use above-knee prostheses. The main questions are: * Do individuals with MPKs have fewer fall-related health issues compared to those with non-microprocessor-controlled prosthetic knees (nMPKs)? * Do individuals with MPKs have increased mobility, faster walking speed, and improved quality of life compared to those with nMPKs? Participants who have recently received an nMPK as part of their regular care can join the study. Those randomized to the control group will keep using their nMPK, while those randomized to the intervention group will receive a stance-and-swing MPK or a stance-only MPK.
NCT04860765
This study will monitor device performance and outcomes of the SAPIEN 3 Transcatheter Heart Valve (THV) System in subjects with a dysfunctional right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) conduit or previously implanted surgical valve in the pulmonic position with a clinical indication for intervention.
NCT05245617
Orthofix Srl put the JPS on the European market (2019) by the mean of a pre-market clinical evaluation made under the Medical Device Directive (MDD) requirements that were based on the analysis of the scientific literature of equivalent devices. This study has been planned as part of the Orthofix Srl post-market active surveillance plan for the collection of data on both the clinical performance and the safety profile of the JPS in a representative population of Patients and users. The rationale of the proposed study is to update and support the pre-market clinical evaluation of the JPS with real-word-evidence clinical data, in order to confirm the benefit/risk ratio of this medical device and to keep the CE mark under Medical Device Regulation (MDR) requirements.
NCT07363538
There remains controversy regarding the optimal timing of surgical treatment for neonatal CCHD (Complex Congenital Heart Disease). Based on the established national multi-center database for surgical treatment of congenital heart disease and the prenatal-postnatal integrated diagnosis and treatment model, this study will conduct a multi-center RCT (Randomized Controlled Trial) to explore the optimal surgical timing for neonatal CCHD. It will also develop innovative comprehensive treatment strategies for critically ill neonatal CCHD patients, use RCT data to evaluate treatment efficacy and establish an evaluation system. This system will be gradually promoted nationwide, aiming to reduce the incidence of perioperative mortality and non-recovery discharge in CCHD patients by 50% (National in-hospital mortality rate of neonatal congenital heart disease surgery in 2023: 6.5%; non-recovery discharge rate: 12.66%), thereby improving the overall level of CCHD treatment in China.