ANZCTR search results

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

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33103 results sorted by trial registration date.
  • Consumers and carers as Health Care Navigators to increase physical health care screening checks and preventive care for people who access mental health services in rural Australia: A randomised implementation and effectiveness trial

  • Do calcium capsules reduce blood glucose in response to a meal in individuals with type 2 diabetes?

    This research is likely to provide ‘proof of principle’ for a novel, ‘nutrient-based’ strategy – oral calcium supplementation – to reduce postprandial glycaemia in people with T2D by slowing gastric emptying, known to be integral to reductions in postprandial glycaemic excursions. The outcomes, if positive, will have major implications for the development of a novel, accessible, safe and cost-effective approach to the prevention and management of T2D.

  • Parent- and clinician-usability of the Baby Moves VIEW (VIdeo Evaluation Web) app – a new baby movement screening tool

    Babies born very prematurely or with brain-related complications at birth are at higher risk of cerebral palsy. A specialised video assessment called the General Movements Assessment (GMA) can help detect cerebral palsy early. This study tests the usability of a smartphone app , Baby Moves VIEW, among 25 parents of high-risk infants. The app allows parents to record their baby's movements at home and securely send the video to a clinician for review.

  • MULTI-ANALYTE: Proof-of-Concept Study in healthy humans testing wearable monitoring patch for measuring multiple analytes in the body

    This is a proof-of-concept study and is not formally powered for hypothesis testing. This is an exploratory, proof-of-concept, open-label study conducted in three independent cohorts (creatine/creatinine, phenylalanine, and tryptophan). Participants will be assigned to a cohort at screening. Participants may be enrolled into any cohort in a non-sequential manner; enrolment is not restricted to a predefined order. This flexible approach allows for parallel recruitment across cohorts based on eligibility and operational readiness. The cohorts consist of: • Cohort 1 = Administration of Creatine for monitoring of Creatinine • Cohort 2= Administration and monitoring of Phenylalanine • Cohort 3 = Administration and monitoring of Tryptophan The primary objective is to evaluate the ability of TDM monitoring patches to detect and continuously track target analytes in interstitial fluid (ISF). Secondary objectives are to assess the relationship between patch-derived signal and blood analyte concentrations and to evaluate device-to-device reproducibility across multiple patches Approximately 12 participants per cohort will be enrolled, with a total sample size of approximately 36 participants across the three cohorts. The sample size is considered sufficient to assess feasibility, signal detection, and variability.

  • 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 1 open label single ascending dose safety and tolerability evaluation

  • First-in-human Diagnostic Imaging Profile of the Theranostic Pair [68Ga]Ga-DOTA-STR-17126 and Low Dose [177Lu] Lu-DOTA-STR-17126 in Patients With Advanced or Metastatic Cancer

    Brief description of the study purpose This is a first in human exploratory imaging study testing two new radioactive imaging agents designed to detect cancers that express a marker called the gastrin releasing peptide receptor (GRPR) in people with advanced or metastatic breast or prostate cancer. The study aims to assess safety, how the agents distribute in the body, radiation dose to organs and tumours, and how well they image cancer lesions. Who is it for? You may be eligible for this study if you are male or female aged 18 years or older with advanced or metastatic breast or prostate cancer that has continued to progress despite standard treatments, who are well enough to take part in imaging scans. Study details Participants will receive one injection of a radioactive imaging tracer followed by multiple PET/CT scans on the same day. If their cancer shows uptake of the tracer, they may also receive a second, very low dose radioactive medicine followed by several SPECT/CT scans over the following days. Blood tests, vital signs checks, ECGs, and medical monitoring will be performed before and after the injections. The results from this study will help guide the future development of a GRPR targeted imaging and treatment approach, with the potential to improve how breast and prostate cancers are identified and treated in the future.

  • Metabolic responses to fibre-rich meals in adults with metabolic syndrome

    This study investigates how adults with metabolic syndrome respond to fibre-enriched meals. Participants will attend a clinic visit where standardised test meals will be consumed, followed by a home monitoring period. Blood samples and continuous glucose monitoring will be used to assess postprandial metabolic responses, including glucose and triglycerides. Additional data on diet, physical activity, and other individual characteristics will also be collected. The study aims to understand individual variability in metabolic responses to dietary fibre and to support the development of more personalised nutrition strategies.

  • Ischaemic changes in the retina of patient with diabetic macular oedema with the use of aflibercept 8mg dose

    Peripheral retinal ischaemia is strongly associated with the presence and severity of diabetic macular oedema (DMO), and ultra-widefield fluorescein angiography (UWF-FA) has demonstrated that peripheral non-perfusion is a key feature in eyes at risk of vision loss. Previous work (Hein et al., 2023) found that intravitreal aflibercept 2mg did not reverse or prevent progression of capillary non-perfusion in eyes with DMO. High-dose intravitreal aflibercept 8 mg has recently been approved and funded (TGA-approved and PBS-listed) for treatment of DMO, and is now used as standard-of-care in appropriate patients at our centre. Clinical trial and real-world data indicate that aflibercept 8 mg provides robust efficacy with a safety profile comparable to aflibercept 2 mg in DMO, with the potential to improve disease control and reduce treatment burden through extended dosing intervals. Given the greater pharmacodynamic effect of the 8 mg dose, it is plausible that aflibercept 8 mg may attenuate the natural course of retinal ischaemia progression in patients receiving treatment for DMO; however, its impact on retinal non-perfusion has not yet been systematically characterised.

  • Do vaginal probiotic supplements improve pregnancy outcomes in women having frozen embryo transfer?

    This study will investigate whether vaginal probiotic supplementation (Amelia V-Spot) improves pregnancy outcomes in women undergoing frozen embryo transfer (FET) treatment as part of in-vitro fertilisation (IVF). Women under 45 years of age with a genetically tested normal (euploid) embryo undergoing FET will be randomly assigned to receive either a vaginal probiotic or placebo treatment. The main objective is to determine whether vaginal probiotics improve clinical pregnancy rates with FET. Secondary outcomes include ongoing pregnancy rates, miscarriage rates, live birth outcomes, changes in the vaginal microbiome, and any treatment-related side effects. The study will be conducted at an IVF centre in Sydney, Australia, with industry funding from Amelia Bio.

  • Testing if a digital health enhanced model of type 2 diabetes care can be implemented in general practice settings for people with type 2 diabetes in Inala, Queensland, Australia.

    This single-site pilot will assess the implementation of a digitally enabled care model for adults with type 2 diabetes delivered through the Brisbane South Community Diabetes Service (BSCDS), Metro South Health. Participants will use a Bluetooth-enabled glucose meter with the Health2Sync app to upload glucose readings for clinician review in a secure dashboard. The model supports timely follow-up, workflow integration and patient self-management. Outcomes focus on feasibility, acceptability and workflow impacts, particularly in a population with higher socioeconomic disadvantage and culturally and linguistically diverse representation.

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