ANZCTR search results

These search results are from the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR).

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33271 results sorted by trial registration date.
  • Effectiveness of a Virtual Reality Walking Program for Spinal Cord Injury Neuropathic Pain Over the Medium to Long Term.

    This study will use a combined multiple-baseline with reversal single-case experimental design (SCED) to evaluate the efficacy and feasibility of a virutal reality walking intervention. The study will use an ABABC design. A refers to the non-intervention phases, B will be the intervention phases. C phase will be used as an assessment of feasibility. The duration of each phase will be Baseline(~2-3wks), Intervention1 (4wks), Wash out (~3-4wks), Intervention2 (4wks), Follow-up (2wks). . We will measure changes in pain, and wellbeing as well as feasibility through questionnaires before and after the intervention. The results will help us understand whether this type of intervention is effective and feasiblity in the medium to long term for people with SCI-related NP. We hypothesise that VRWalk will have positive long-term effects on NP intensity. Additionally, we hypothesise that VRWalk will be feasible.

  • Effectiveness of Innovative Low-dose Radiotherapy for Osteoarthritis Relief (iROAR) and Management: A multicentre clinical registry

    The iROAR registry is a prospective, multicentre observational study designed to evaluate the real-world effectiveness of low-dose radiotherapy (LDRT) in adults with symptomatic osteoarthritis across Australia. Participants receiving standard-of-care LDRT will be followed for up to 24 months to assess changes in pain, physical function, and health-related quality of life using validated patient-reported outcome measures. The primary objective is to determine the proportion of treated joints achieving a clinically meaningful response at 6 months based on OMERACT-OARSI criteria. Secondary outcomes include long-term clinical response, safety, retreatment rates, and healthcare utilisation outcomes associated with LDRT. The registry aims to generate the first prospective Australian dataset to inform clinical practice, treatment standardisation, and future research on LDRT for osteoarthritis.

  • Island Study Linking Ageing and Neurodegenerative Disease: Investigating the impact of a public health approach to dementia prevention

    ISLAND hypothesises that a public health approach to dementia prevention can reduce modifiable risk factors in the Tasmanian community. Our novel approach to dementia prevention involves a combination of education with positive lifestyle change. We have shown that our public health approach has efficacy to reduce modifiable risk factors in the Tasmanian community.

  • Does pre-prandial (before meals) compared to prandial (with meals) ingestion of metformin optimise glucose lowering in people with type 2 diabetes?

    Metformin is the first-line glucose-lowering medicine in most clinical guidelines on the management of type 2 diabetes. Standard advice has been to take metformin with meals. However, recent evidence suggests that taking metformin an interval before each meal may work better for lowering blood glucose after the meal. In this study, we will test whether taking metformin 60 min before meals improves glucose-lowering after each meal, compared to taking it with meals in people with type 2 diabetes.

  • Shockwave Medical Mitral First in Human Study utilising the Shockwave Medical Valvular Transcatheter Lithotripsy II (VTL II) System for subjects with severe, calcific mitral stenosis

    This study is a prospective, multicentre, first-in-human study to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Shockwave Medical Valvular Transcatheter Lithotripsy II (VTL II) System in subjects with symptomatic, severe calcified mitral stenosis. Eligible participants who meet all inclusion and exclusion criteria and provide informed consent will undergo a transcatheter mitral valve lithotripsy (TMVL) procedure using the VTL II System. The procedure is performed via a trans-vascular approach in a catheterisation laboratory or a hybrid suite, where lithotripsy (soundwaves) pulses are delivered to modify calcified mitral valve tissue. Additional balloon mitral valvuloplasty may be performed at the operator's discretion. Participants will receive standard post-procedural care and be followed during hospitalisation and at discharge. Follow-up assessments will occur at discharge, 30 days, 6 months, and 12 months post procedure. Study exit occurs at 12 months following the index procedure.

  • Is Ultrasound as accurate as Chest Xray for detecting remaining lung collapse after chest drain removal following chest injury

    This study is being conducted to see if using ultrasound is a reliable way to check for any remaining air around the lung after a chest drain has been removed in people who have been injured. Currently, after a chest drain is taken out, patients usually have a chest x-ray to check for any remaining air or lung collapse. In this study, you will have the usual chest x-ray, but we will also do a quick ultrasound at your bedside to check your lungs. This will help us find out if ultrasound works just as well as an x-ray for spotting any remaining air or lung collapse. If ultrasound works just as well as a chest x-ray, it could mean patients won’t need to be moved to the radiology department for an x-ray and they will also avoid the small amount of radiation that comes with x-rays.

  • Understanding how footwear designed to reduce toe walking affects walking patterns and comfort in children with idiopathic toe walking or toe walking associated with autism

    A randomised within-subject feasibility crossover study investigating the immediate effects of footwear designed to reduce toe walking on gait characteristics, heel contact, comfort and acceptability in children with idiopathic toe walking and toe walking associated with Autism Spectrum Disorder

  • A two-step screening pathway to detect early heart failure in cancer survivors: the TRIAGE-HF pilot study

    Brief description of the study purpose: This pilot study aims to identify whether a two-step risk screening pathway can accurately detect early, often symptom-free heart dysfunction that may occur after cancer treatment. Who is it for? You may be eligible for this study if you are male or female age 40 years or older, who have completed cancer treatment that may affect the heart (such as chemotherapy, radiotherapy to the chest, or targeted therapies) and are eligible for Medicare. Study details: Participants will attend a single study visit. No treatment is given as part of this study. At the visit, participants will first complete a clinical risk questionnaire (CHERISH) that estimates their risk of heart failure. They will then undergo a standard 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG), which is analysed using an artificial intelligence program to estimate the chance of early heart dysfunction. All participants will also undergo a standard heart ultrasound, which measures heart function and is used as the reference test. There is no therapeutic intervention, and the screening results are not used to guide clinical care during the study. It is hoped that the findings will help design a larger multicentre study and could support scalable, low-cost heart screening for cancer survivors and other high-risk groups.

  • A two-part Study to Evaluate the Safety and Effect of TO-O-1007 Intravitreal Implant in Subjects with Geographic Atrophy Secondary to age-related macular degeneration (AMD)- Part 2 Randomized, single-masked (subjects), sham-controlled proof-of-activity evaluation

  • Virtual Emergency Department Short-Stay Unit for infants with mild bronchiolitis: a non-inferiority randomised controlled trial of hospital-level care at home using remote patient monitoring to assess oxygen therapy, acceptability and cost outcomes

    Brief summary Bronchiolitis is a common chest infection in infants and some babies need short-term hospital observation in an Emergency Department Short-Stay Unit. This study will test whether selected infants with mild bronchiolitis who need short-stay observation can be safely cared for at home through a virtual Emergency Department Short-Stay Unit model. Infants in the virtual care group will receive hospital-level care at home using wearable monitoring devices that continuously measure oxygen levels, heart rate and breathing rate. They will also receive regular virtual nursing observations, daily paediatrician-led virtual ward rounds and 24-hour access to the virtualKIDS clinical support line. This will be compared with usual care in a physical hospital Emergency Department Short-Stay Unit. The main purpose of the study is to determine whether virtual short-stay care at home is not worse than hospital short-stay care in terms of the need for oxygen treatment within 7 days. The study will also look at safety, hospital re-presentations, length of stay, family and clinician experience, and costs. Study hypothesis We hypothesise that, for carefully selected infants with mild bronchiolitis, virtual Emergency Department Short-Stay Unit care at home with wearable monitoring and regular clinical review will be non-inferior to physical Emergency Department Short-Stay Unit admission, as measured by the need for oxygen therapy within 7 days of randomisation.

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