TTrialPathMatch Me to Trials

Browse Clinical Trials in Pennsylvania

Explore actively recruiting studies pulled live from the public ClinicalTrials.gov registry. Filter by condition and state, then check your eligibility in under a minute.

Matching trials

13 recruiting in PA
Recruiting

A Phase 3B Study to Evaluate Bone Mineral Density With Long-Term Use of Relugolix Combination Tablet in Women With Uterine Fibroids or Endometriosis

Uterine Fibroids ยท Endometriosis

The purpose of this clinical trial to characterize changes in bone mineral density during continuous treatment with relugolix combination tablet for up to 48 months (4 years) and 1 year of post-treatment follow-up in premenopausal women with heavy menstrual bleeding associated with uterine leiomyomas (fibroids) or with moderate-to-severe pain associated with endometriosis.

Erie, Philadelphia +more, PA18โ€“50 yrsWomen
See details & check eligibility
Recruiting

Feasibility of a Mindfulness Intervention for Endometriosis Surgery

Endometriosis ยท Pain ยท Mindfulness

Endometriosis is a common cause of pelvic pain in women which has been historically under-studied and under-diagnosed. The goal of this research is to pilot-test the feasibility and acceptability of a manualized, single-session brief mindfulness-based intervention (BMBI) among participants with endometriosis-related chronic pelvic pain (ECPP) who undergo surgical treatment, and gather preliminary data necessary for future studies assessing BMBI's impact on outcomes in surgically-treated ECPP. This pilot study will enroll 10-20 adult participants with ECPP to receive either a BMBI adjunctive to treatment as usual (TAU; n=5-10) or education with TAU (n=5-10) prior to their ECPP surgery. The central hypothesis is the BMBI is feasible to deliver pre-operatively, acceptable to patients, and may help improve acute post-surgical outcomes through more adaptive stress coping and pain processing, enabled by mindfulness training.

Hershey, PA18+ yrsWomen
See details & check eligibility
Recruiting

The Effect of Medical Management Following Excisional Surgery for Endometriosis: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Endometriosis

The goal of this investigator-initiated single-site clinical trial is to compare the overall quality of life of participants taking Relugolix combination therapy (Rel-CT) following excisional surgery for endometriosis to participants that do not take Rel-CT following the same surgery. Rel-CT is an FDA approved form of medical treatment for endometriosis. It is known to work in treating endometriosis pain. However, investigators do not know whether or not there is a benefit to beginning Rel-CT immediately following surgery. This study will test if patients who take Rel-CT after surgery have better quality of life and less chance the endometriosis comes back, requiring additional surgery. The main question it aims to answer is: \- Does taking Rel-CT following excisional surgery for endometriosis result in higher Endometriosis Health Profile 30 (EHP-30) scores, indicating a positive impact on overall health-related quality of life and well-being? Participants will: * Be randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups. One treatment group will take study drug Rel-CT after having excisional surgery, and the other treatment group will just have the surgery alone. * Be asked to complete questionnaires, called the Endometriosis Health Profile 30 (EHP-30) at 4 timepoints. The first time is before surgery, then at follow-up visits at 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months. The survey has 30 questions that ask about pain, control, powerlessness, emotional well-being, social support, and self-image. Researchers will compare the two treatment groups (Rel-CT and non Rel-CT) to see if there is a change in EHP-30 scores.

Wynnewood, PA18+ yrsWomen
See details & check eligibility
Recruiting

Thromboxane Function in Women With Endometriosis

Endometriosis

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare neurovascular regulation in women with endometriosis and healthy women. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Do women with endometriosis have greater blood pressure and pain responses to a stimulus than healthy women? * Do women with endometriosis have greater platelet activity than healthy women? Participants will take aspirin and/or placebo and will: * perform hand grip exercise and cold pressor tests * undergo iontophoresis and blood draw Researchers will compare women with and without endometriosis to see if there is a difference in neurovascular regulation.

University Park, PA18โ€“45 yrsWomen
See details & check eligibility
Recruiting

Menopausal HT for Women Living With HIV (HoT)

HIV Infection ยท Menopause

Women living with HIV have been shown to experience more frequent and severe hot flashes and night sweats (collectively known as vasomotor symptoms) as compared to women living without HIV. This correlates with disturbed sleep, increased depressive symptoms, increased anxiety, worse mental function, interference with activities of daily living including work, and worse overall quality of life. Hormone therapy is considered to be the most effective therapy for hot flashes and night sweats and the most appropriate choice to prevent bone loss at the time of menopause for women without HIV. However, the usefulness of hormone therapy has not been specifically studied in women living with HIV. This trial is being done to see if: * There is evidence to support the use of hormone therapy (estradiol with or without progesterone) for the treatment of hot flashes and night sweats in women living with HIV * Hormone therapy improves mental function, mood, sleep, quality of life, bone health, heart health, and inflammation in women living with HIV * Hormone therapy is safe and tolerable for women living with HIV

Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, PA40โ€“60 yrsWomen
See details & check eligibility
Recruiting

Role of Menopause in Thermoregulation

Menopause ยท Aging

The frequency and severity of heat waves has increased in the last decades. Older adults (over 65 years) have impaired responses to heat stress making them at increased risk for adverse events. Previous heat waves report that women over 65 experience worse health outcomes than any other age group and age matched men. Aging and reproductive hormones, specifically estrogen, independently alter responses to heat stress. However, the combined effects of low estrogen following menopause and aging on the response to heat stress are unknown. In this study, the investigators will identify the role of estrogen in pre and post menopausal women on thermoregulatory responses to heat stress.

University Park, PA42โ€“64 yrsWomen
See details & check eligibility
Recruiting

Prunes Preventing Bone Loss in Perimenopause

Perimenopausal Bone Loss

Dietary interventions of prune consumption during the transmenopausal period are innovative methods to prevent bone loss. Modern medicine does not intervene to prevent or attenuate this highly vulnerable period of bone loss which, if successfully attenuated, can potentially prevent/delay osteoporosis in women. The transmenopausal period represents an opportunistic window for the study because bone loss is at its greatest at this time, with females losing as much as 6-7% of bone. If this project is successful at attenuating bone loss, it can immediately be disseminated to the public to promote prune consumption to slow down and attenuate perimenopausal bone loss. As such, this project could improve the long-term bone health of females and avoid or delay osteoporosis and improve quality of life. The long-term goal of this study is to test the novel hypothesis that prune consumption for 18 months during the 3-year transmenopausal period prevents the dramatic rate of bone loss in perimenopausal females during a window of heightened physiological vulnerability. At Penn State University, the study will compare the effects of 18 months of daily dietary consumption of 50 g of prunes (5-6) versus a no-prune control group on bone outcomes (bone mineral density, bone geometry), mechanistic factors (bone and inflammatory markers, inflammatory response of ex vivo cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells, monocytes), and gut microbiome.

University Park, PA44โ€“55 yrsWomen
See details & check eligibility
Recruiting

Comparing Digital Therapy, Trazodone, and Daridorexant for Menopause-Related Insomnia Symptoms

Menopausal Women ยท Insomnia

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn how three current insomnia therapies (trazodone, daridorexant, cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia) compare with each other in peri- and post-menopausal women. It will also learn about the safety of the treatments. The main questions it aims to answer are: Which commonly used insomnia therapies are most effective and safe for improving insomnia symptoms in peri- and post-menopausal people? How well do the treatments work for people from different backgrounds, who are at different stages of menopause, and who have different conditions common during menopause (e.g., sleep apnea, mood disturbance, etc.)? What medical problems do participants have when using these treatments? Participants will: Be asked to take trazodone every night, take daridorexant every night, or participate in an online behavioral program for insomnia, for a total of 12 months. Participate in a total of one in-person visit and 7 virtual visits (phone calls) over the 12 months. Wear (and keep) a Fitbit and fill out a daily sleep diary for at least 4 weeks over the 12 months. Fill out online surveys 4 times over the 12 months.

Pittsburgh, PA40โ€“62 yrsWomen
See details & check eligibility
Recruiting

Human Menopausal Gonadotropin Research in Infertility Assessing Cumulative Live Birth With Frozen Embryo Transfer.

Infertility (IVF Patients)

The goal of this multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trial is toto evaluate the efficacy and safety of a human menopausal gonadotropin (hMG) in the development of multiple follicles, pregnancy, and cumulative live birth as part of an Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) cycle in in women with a diagnosis of infertility.

Bryn Mawr, PA18โ€“42 yrsWomen
See details & check eligibility
Recruiting

Endometriosis and Microvascular Dysfunction: Role of Inflammation

Endometriosis

The purpose of this study is to better understand the underlying mechanisms associated with elevated cardiovascular disease risk in women with endometriosis, and to measure the effectiveness of emerging endometriosis treatments on outcomes specific to cardiovascular dysfunction. Epidemiologic data demonstrate a clear association between endometriosis, reproductive risk factors, inflammation and cardiovascular (CV) risk. Circulating factors, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and oxidized LDL (oxLDL), are two of many biomarkers of cardiovascular and inflammatory disease of endometriosis. An important signaling mechanism through which circulating LDL and oxLDL act is the lectin-like oxidized LDL receptor (LOX-1). LOX-1 signal transduction functionally results in pronounced endothelial dysfunction, a hallmark of CV. The investigators hypothesis that one factor mediating the elevated risk of cardiovascular disease in endometriosis is systemic inflammation and activation of LOX-1 receptor mechanisms.

University Park, PA18โ€“45 yrsWomen
See details & check eligibility