Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

2 clinical studies listed.

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Penis/Surgery

Tundra lists 2 Penis/Surgery clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07316491

Autologous Fat Grafting Beneath Penile Split Thickness Skin Graft Placement During Penile Reconstruction

The goal of this randomized interventional clinical trial is to learn if placement of a thin layer of fatty tissue (fat graft) beneath a split-thickness skin graft on the surface of the penis improved outcomes of surgery in men who are scheduled to undergo reconstructive surgery on their penis and genitals. This is a randomized study, meaning that half of participants will receive the fat graft with their standard-of-care surgery, and half will have their standard-of-care surgery alone. Fat grafting underneath split-thickness skin grafts in other parts of the body has been shown to improve healing of the skin graft. Both study groups will be followed for specific outcomes through outpatient clinic visits for the first 12 months after their surgery, as well as chart review. Questions the investigators hope to answer include: * Does fat grafting improve the pliability and feel of the penile skin after grafting * Does fat grafting change the penile length after surgery * Does fat grafting improve sexual function, urinary function, and genital self-image after surgery * Are there any unforeseen complications related to the fat grafting procedure Participants will be asked to complete questionnaires related to sexual, urinary, and genital self-image questionnaires before surgery, 3 months after surgery, and 12 months after surgery. Noninvasive testing of the penile skin will also be performed at participants' routine appointments.

Gender: MALE

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-02-17

1 state

Penis/Surgery
Penis/Injuries
Penile Skin
+1
RECRUITING

NCT02395497

Human Penile Allotransplantation

Injuries to the genitalia are of concern to the military with emphasis placed on the surgical reconstruction and psychological health of these Wounded Warriors. However, despite significant surgical advances in microvascular surgery and autologous free tissue transfer, conventional reconstructions cannot truly replace the complicated structures and functions of the penis including the urethra, erogenous sensation, and erectile corporal bodies. Conventional reconstruction poses several challenges: patients may not have sufficient donor tissue due to other injuries or previous surgery; multiple operations are often needed to restore the neophallus; the final reconstruction only approximates the penis' native form; recreating the urethra is challenging and the new urethra is prone to stricture and fistula formation; the erectile function necessary for sexual intercourse is often lacking; and insufficient protective sensation can lead to penile implant extrusion, infection, subsequent explantation or loss of the reconstruction. The investigators propose this clinical trial to determine functional outcomes and quality of life for Wounded Warriors and civilians who choose to undergo penile allotransplantation. The investigators will combine extensive experience performing total penile reconstruction in a large population affected by congenital, traumatic, and therapeutically extirpated Genitourinary deformities and expertise in reconstructive transplantation using an immunomodulatory protocol to for this study. The investigators anticipate penile transplantation can potentially replace "like with like," restoring the appearance, anatomy, and function of the recipient in a manner far superior to autologous reconstruction. This project will establish the ability to perform penile allotransplantation using an immunomodulatory protocol and will compare outcomes with conventional phalloplasty patient results. Study Design: This is a non-randomized subject self-controlled clinical trial to implement a cell-based immunomodulatory protocol for penile allotransplantation. An intermediate deliverable is achieving allograft survival and functional return with reduced dosing/frequency of maintenance immunosuppression on steroid-free monotherapy (tacrolimus) immunosuppression. The long-term deliverable and goal is to demonstrate superior outcomes when compared to satisfaction and QOL in conventional phalloplasty patients 12-60 months post-transplant.

Gender: MALE

Ages: 18 Years - 69 Years

Updated: 2025-07-07

1 state

Amputation
Wounds and Injuries
Amputation, Traumatic
+6