8 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
Clinical proof-of-concept study comparing the acute. effects of an algae-based dietary supplement on immune surveillance and alertness. This study involves twenty-four participants composed of healthy adults, who will be taking either a placebo or supplement at different times. Testing for immune status, cytokine levels, and immune responsiveness will be conducted to determine the acute impact of the supplement on immune function compared to a placebo. Long term effects and lingering effects will be tested using the same parameters, following a consumption period of one week, as well as a washout period of one week.
The overall goal of this study is to understand the immune response (IgG) to SARS-CoV-2 to fill critical knowledge gaps in the natural history of this virus and to inform the development of future infection mitigation efforts. The study team aims to assess the prevalence of circulating IgG antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 and the factors associated with sero-prevalence. These data will be used to estimate the total population that has been exposed to the virus (asymptomatic and symptomatic), the proportion of the population that may be protected by natural immunity, and the proportion that is susceptible. Data obtained from this research will be shared with the Florida Department of Health.
A small cross-over trial on 24 people involving an herbal tea blend to test whether consuming 1 cup of tea triggers changes in the numbers of natural killer cells in the blood circulation as evidence of immune cell trafficking within 2 hours.
Clinical proof-of-concept study, comparing the acute immune impacts of 3 doses of a probiotic strain to a placebo. This study involves twenty-four participants, composed of healthy adults, who will be taking a placebo and 3 different doses of the probiotic at different times. Testing for immune status and cytokine levels will be conducted to determine the acute impact of the probiotic on immune function when compared to a placebo.
Clinical verification study evaluating the effects of a nutraceutical product. This study involves thirty participants composed of healthy adults, who will be taking either a placebo or nutraceutical supplement at different times. Testing for immune status, cytokine levels, and immune responsiveness will be conducted to determine the acute impact of the nutraceutical on immune function compared to a placebo.
Clinical-proof-of concept study, comparing the acute immune impacts of of 2 doses of a novel blend of supplements to a placebo. This study involves twenty-four participants, composed of healthy adults, who will be taking a placebo and 2 different doses of the blend at different times. Testing for immune status and cytokine levels will be conducted to determine the acute impact of the blend on immune function as compared to the placebo.
To learn if monitoring blood levels of heart injury (troponin levels) in cancer participants treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors will lead to decreased heart-related side effects.
Lynch syndrome (OMIM #120435) is the most common dominantly inherited colorectal cancer syndrome with an estimated prevalence of 1:270 individuals. It increases the lifetime risk of colorectal and endometrial cancer primarily, but it is associated with a high risk of other cancers (pancreas, stomach, ovarian, central nervous system, skin, among others). It is caused by a germline mutation in one of four DNA mismatch repair genes or a terminal deletion of the MSH2-adjacent gene EpCAM. Despite adherence to cancer surveillance programs, many patients still develop colorectal cancer and endometrial cancer. The Prospective Lynch Syndrome Database (PLSD) suggests that more frequent surveillance intervals do not significantly improve cancer risk reduction. The PLSD also revealed that the incidence of colorectal cancer in MLH1 and MSH2 carriers was even higher than previously expected, reaching as high as 41-36% among MLH1 carriers, regardless of ethnic background. The development of colorectal cancer despite surveillance is an unresolved question. Therefore, there is an unmet need for effective cancer prevention strategies.