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Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

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2 clinical studies listed.

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Post Surgery Patients

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

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RECRUITING

NCT07532590

Patients With Pancreatic Tumor: Use of an App to Monitor Progress in a Simple and Intuitive Way by Periodically Completing Targeted Questionnaires and Providing Educational and Informational Content (PancreasPlus).

Caring for people with pancreatic cancer requires good coordination between hospital care and care at home, with different healthcare professionals working closely together. Patients are also becoming more involved in managing their own care on a daily basis. However, this active involvement can be difficult if there is poor communication with healthcare teams, differences in skills or familiarity with digital tools, or systems that do not support patient participation. The PancreasPlus app was developed to support patients and caregivers by providing reliable information, self-monitoring tools, and a communication channel with healthcare professionals. The study aims to assess the feasibility, patient engagement, and perceived quality of routine use of the app. It is hypothesized that its use will improve engagement, perceived quality, reduce anxiety and unplanned hospital visits, without introducing technological or privacy risks. The app supports information and data collection but does not replace clinical decision-making. Objectives Primary objectives: Assess feasibility and patient engagement through questionnaire completion. Evaluate perceived service quality using the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-8). Secondary objectives: Monitor unplanned hospital visits and adherence to chemotherapy. Assess anxiety (HADS-A), nutritional status, and global quality of life (PROMIS Global). Evaluate usability and acceptability of the app (SUS, UTAUT2 short version). Endpoints Primary endpoints include questionnaire completion rates and perceived quality (CSQ-8 score). Secondary endpoints include unplanned hospital access, chemotherapy adherence, anxiety levels, nutritional status, quality of life, and app usability/acceptability. Methods This is a prospective, interventional, multicenter study with consecutive enrollment of eligible patients. Each participant will be followed for 3 months, with most activities conducted remotely via the app. At baseline (T0), patients receive study information, provide consent, undergo training, register in the app, and complete initial assessments (clinical, socio-demographic, PROMIS Global, HADS-A). At 12 weeks (W12), follow-up includes all outcome questionnaires and data on unplanned hospital visits. The app includes features such as a personal diary (symptoms, weight, BMI, appointments), interactive questionnaires with tailored feedback, and educational content on nutrition, prevention, emotional support, and patient rights. Population Inclusion criteria: adults (≥18 years) with pancreatic cancer, access to a smartphone/tablet (or caregiver support), ability to consent, and understanding of Italian. Exclusion criteria include severe cognitive impairment, inability to use the app or complete follow-up, or withdrawal of consent. Sample Size and Analysis A total of 185 patients will be enrolled (accounting for 10% dropout), based on an expected 70% engagement rate. Analyses will be conducted on both intention-to-observe and per-protocol populations. Engagement will be analyzed as questionnaire completion rates, while other outcomes will be analyzed using appropriate statistical models (e.g., logistic regression, ANCOVA, descriptive statistics). An interim analysis at 50% enrollment is planned to address potential low engagement.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-05-11

2 states

Ductal Adenocarcinoma of Pancreas
Pancreatectomy
Caregiver
+3
RECRUITING

NCT07506720

Early Mobilization Following Elective Spine Surgery: Trial of In-bed Cycling

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if early mobilization using an in-bed cycling device can reduce the amount of time patients spend in bed after elective spine surgery in adults. The main questions it aims to answer are: Does in-bed cycling on the day after surgery reduce the amount of time patients spend in bed over the next 24 hours? Does in-bed cycling reduce the length of hospital stay and improve participation during physiotherapy assessment? Researchers will compare patients who receive an in-bed cycling session plus standard postoperative care to patients who receive standard postoperative care alone to see if early in-bed cycling improves mobility and recovery after spine surgery. Participants will: Be randomly assigned to either a standard care group or an in-bed cycling group Wear a fitness tracker to measure activity levels and time spent in bed Receive standard postoperative care Complete a 30-minute in-bed cycling session on the day after surgery (intervention group only) Be monitored for pain and vital signs during the study period Undergo a physiotherapy assessment to evaluate mobility and participation

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-04-02

1 state

Spine
Post Surgery Patients
Recovery Method