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Active clinical trials for "Opioid-Induced Constipation"

Results 81-90 of 91

Real World Observational Study of Naloxegol for Patients With Cancer Pain Diagnosed With OIC.

Opioid Induced Constipation

This is a single-arm, open label, multinational, multicentre, prospective, real world observational study of Naloxegol in adult subjects with Opioid Induced Constipation (OIC) in patients receiving Naloxegol in routine clinical practice. Subjects who are receiving Naloxegol (prescribed by their physician according to the SmPC, which recommends that all currently used maintenance laxative therapy should be halted) during the enrolment period may be eligible for enrolment into the study.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Study of Opioid-Induced Constipation 2 Project

Opioid-induced ConstipationCancer1 more

The aim of the project is to investigate OIC in a real world / diverse group of patients with cancer. The objectives of the project are to determine: a) efficacy of a treatment algorithm to manage OIC; b) efficacy of conventional laxatives to manage OIC; c) efficacy of PAMORAs / other interventions to manage OIC.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Naloxegol Drug Utilization Post Authorisation Safety Study

Opioid Induced Constipation

This post-authorization observational safety study determines the characteristics of patients prescribed naloxegol at time of first prescription and treatment patterns of naloxegol in follow-up in the United Kingdom (UK), Norway, Sweden, and Germany.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Study on Quality of Life in Advanced Cancer Patients With Opioid-induced Constipation Treated With...

Opioid UseConstipation Drug Induced1 more

Opioid-Induced Constipation (OIC) is often associated with a compromised quality of life of patients in palliative care (PC) setting. Among the Peripherally-Acting Mu-Opioid Receptor Antagonists, Naloxegol is the most effective to treat OIC and to improve OIC-related aspects of quality of life in patients with non-cancer pain. This observational study aims to assess the impact of a 4-weeks Naloxegol therapy on the quality of life in advanced cancer patients with OIC assisted by a home PC program. The study is enrolling cancer patients with OIC (defined according to Rome IV criteria) not relieved by first-line laxatives, starting the therapy with 25 mg/day of Naloxegol. The main parameters evaluated at the beginning of the therapy (T0) and after 28 days (T28) are: Patient Assessment of Constipation Quality-of-Life (PAC-QoL, 4 subscales: physical discomfort, psychosocial discomfort, worries and concerns, satisfaction), evaluation of objective (number of weekly evacuations) and subjective constipation (Bowel Function Index, BFI, normal score<30), pain assessment by NRS.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Non-interventional Study Comparing Targiniq and Oxycodone/Laxatives

PainOpioid Induced Constipation

The objective of the non-interventional study is to compare the quality of life, health care resource use and costs between the use of a combination of oxycodone and naloxone (Targiniq) versus oxycodone and laxatives for patients with severe pain, and to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of treatment with Targiniq.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

The Efficacy of Acupressure in Managing Opioid-induced Constipation

Opioid-induced Bowel DysfunctionConstipation Drug Induced

In a randomized controlled study to evaluate the effect of acupressure application on opioid-related constipation, the Patient Identification Form, Defecation Diary, Visual Analog Scale and Constipation Quality of Life Scale will be applied after obtaining written informed consent from the patients. Patients in the experimental group will be given acupressure once a day for 7 consecutive days. Acupressure application will be applied by researchers who have been trained and certified on this subject. While the patients are in supine position, pressure will be applied to each acupressure point around the navel, respectively, Zhongwan (CV12), Guanyuan (CV4) and Tianshu (ST25) for 2 minutes for a total of 6 minutes. No attempt will be made to the control group. All patients will be followed for a total of 4 weeks and the Defecation Diary and Visual Comparison Scale will be applied weekly. 4. Constipation Quality of Life Scale will be applied again at the end of the week. The study was planned to examine the effect of acupressure on opioid-related constipation.

Unknown status13 enrollment criteria

RELISTOR's Effects on Opioid-Induced Constipation

OIC

This will be a prospective case-control study of 40 patients undergoing 1-2 level ALIF procedures at Methodist Dallas Medical Center (MDMC). Patient records will be reviewed to identify details including demographics, comorbidities, procedure details, and the primary and secondary outcome metrics.

Withdrawn34 enrollment criteria

Assessing a Stool Symptom Screener in Patients With Chronic Opioid-Induced Constipation

Opioid-induced Constipation

This qualitative research is to assess the validity of the stool symptom screener that will be used in patients with chronic opioid-induced constipation to determine the adequacy of their response to laxatives.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Longitudinal Study of Patients With Opioid-Induced Constipation

Patients With Opioid Induced Constipation

This prospective hybrid longitudinal study was conducted in the United States (US), Canada, the United Kingdom (UK), and Germany. To obtain the most complete and comprehensive understanding of the burden of opioid-induced constipation (OIC) in these countries, this study used a combination of web-based, longitudinal patient survey, retrospective data abstraction from medical records, and a prospective physician survey. The primary objective of this study was to estimate the rate of inadequate response to laxatives (LIR), which was defined as having sufficient laxative use (at least one laxative use ≥ four times per reference period), and inadequate response (defined as fewer than three bowel movements (BMs) OR at least one of the following symptoms on the Patient Assessment of Constipation Symptoms (PAC-SYM) measure scored as moderate, severe or very severe: BMs too hard, straining to have a BM, feeling like you didn't "finish" a BM, and feeling like you had to pass a BM but could not), in a cohort of non-cancer pain and cancer pain (separately) participants with OIC, by country and overall. The secondary study objectives are as follows: To estimate the rate of LIR for two subgroups: 1xLIR and 2xLIR. 1xLIR was defined as use of at least one laxative agent ≥ 4 times in the reference period while 2xLIR was defined as the use of at least two laxative agents, each used ≥ 4 times in the reference period; To describe the baseline demographic and clinical characteristics, including prior health status, comorbidities, constipation-related GI symptoms, and concomitant medications of patients with OIC; To describe drug utilization and self-management of OIC; To describe the pre-index and post-index healthcare resource utilization and estimate costs associated with the diagnosis, treatment, and general management of OIC (including laxative use) and events attributed to OIC, including both direct and indirect costs; To describe patient-reported impact of OIC on health-related quality of life, productivity, and pain management; To describe patient-reported treatment satisfaction with laxative use; and To describe physician-reported awareness of OIC and symptoms and understanding of patient-reported impact of OIC.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Study of Opioid-Induced Constipation 1 Project

Opioid-induced ConstipationCancer1 more

The aim of the project is to investigate opioid-induced constipation (OIC) in a real world / diverse group of patients with cancer. The objectives of the project are to determine: a) prevalence of OIC; b) clinical features / impact of OIC; c) management of OIC.

Completed2 enrollment criteria
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