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Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

3 clinical studies listed.

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Necrotising Enterocolitis

Tundra lists 3 Necrotising Enterocolitis clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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RECRUITING

NCT07192393

Health-Related Quality-of-Life and Household Financial and Wellbeing Impacts of Prematurity and Necrotising Enterocolitis (NEC).

PREM-IMPACT is a UK-based observational study exploring how caring for a very premature baby-particularly one affected by necrotising enterocolitis (NEC)-impacts families over the first year after hospital discharge. NEC is a serious bowel disease that can occur in premature babies, often requiring surgery and prolonged hospitalisation. This study runs alongside the WHEAT International Trial, which investigates whether pausing or continuing milk feeds during blood transfusions affects the risk of NEC in very preterm babies. PREM-IMPACT acts as a nested economic evaluation of the WHEAT Trial, helping to understand whether different feeding practices around transfusion offer good value for money from both the NHS and family perspective. PREM-IMPACT will collect detailed data on babies' health-related quality of life, as well as the financial, emotional, and social impact on parents and siblings. Families are recruited from neonatal units when their baby is ready to go home and complete questionnaires at three timepoints: 1) just before discharge, 2) six months later, and 3) twelve months later. Questionnaires cover health, wellbeing, healthcare use, and costs to the family (such as travel, time off work, or extra care needs). A dedicated research nurse based at the lead NHS site helps coordinate follow-up centrally. By studying families of babies with and without NEC, this project aims to clarify the burden of prematurity and NEC on infant outcomes and family wellbeing. The results will inform future policy decisions, including whether pausing or continuing milk feeds during transfusion should be adopted in routine neonatal care.

Gender: All

Ages: Any - 30 Weeks

Updated: 2026-03-30

1 state

Prematurity; Extreme
Prematurity; Decision Support
Necrotising Enterocolitis
+3
RECRUITING

NCT06092463

The Intestinal Innate Immune System in Newborns. Development and Inflammation in Health and Disease

The goal of this observational study is to determine the normal development of the human intestinal immune system in premature and mature neonatal life and to determine the pathophysiology behind life-threatening gastrointestinal diseases that appear during early life. The main questions aim to answer are: * to determine the normal development of the human intestinal immune system in premature and mature neonatal life and to determine the pathophysiology behind life-threatening gastrointestinal diseases that appear during early life. * is to investigate the development of the immune system in relation to enteral nutrition during the neonatal period. Participants will be asked to give faecal samples from day 1 of life and weekly for the following weeks until discharge (preterm infants). Further, surgery faecal samples and intestinal tissue will be collected proximal and distal to the pathology. In cases with a stoma, and when the child will undergo later reversal surgery, tissue samples from the proximal and distal ends of the intestine will be collected together with fecal samples (preterm and children up to 1 year of age who need to undergo intestinal surgery due to atresia).

Gender: All

Ages: Any - 1 Year

Updated: 2025-05-21

Preterm Infants
Term Infants
Necrotising Enterocolitis
+2
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT05117164

Enteral Feeding in Infants With Duct Dependant Lesions.

This is a multicenter randomised controlled trial to assess whether standardised enteral feeding in newborns with duct dependenty congenital heart disease decreases the risk of necrotising enterocolitis (NEC). The investigators plan to include a total 384 infants. The study will be carried out in three level III hospitals in Poland. The primary end will be NEC and/or death. Secondary end points include weight gain, hospital length of stay, time required to reach full feeding.

Gender: All

Ages: 1 Minute - 72 Hours

Updated: 2022-07-20

Duct Dependent Lesions
Necrotising Enterocolitis
Death
+1