The city of Fresno, California, currently has 3 active clinical trials seeking participants for Parkinson's Disease research studies.
A Study to Evaluate the Efficacy, Safety, Tolerability, and Pharmacokinetics of UCB0022 in Study Participants With Advanced Parkinson's Disease
Recruiting
The primary purpose of this study is to demonstrate the superiority of UCB0022 as an adjunctive treatment to stable dose of standard-of-care (SoC) (including at least levodopa therapy) over placebo with regard to motor fluctuations time spent in the OFF state (OFF time) in study participants with advanced Parkinson's Disease (PD).
Gender:
All
Ages:
Between 35 years and 80 years
Trial Updated:
06/13/2024
Locations: Pd0060 50428, Fresno, California
Conditions: Parkinson Disease
Rostock International Parkinson's Disease Study (ROPAD)
Recruiting
Rostock International Parkinson's Disease Study - An International, multicenter, epidemiological observational study aiming at identification of LRRK2-positive patients, the recruitment of 25,000 PD participants and the establishment of a candidate biomarker in the LRRK2-positive cohort.
Gender:
All
Ages:
Between 30 years and 80 years
Trial Updated:
03/21/2024
Locations: Neuro-Pain Medical Center, Fresno, California
Conditions: Parkinson´s Disease
Dipraglurant (ADX48621) for the Treatment of Patients With Parkinson's Disease Receiving Levodopa-based Therapy
Recruiting
This study is designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of dipraglurant in PD patients with dyskinesia (randomized 1:1 to receive active or placebo) for 12 weeks (1 week at 150 mg per day and 11 weeks at 300 mg per day). The primary efficacy assessment will be based on the Unified Dyskinesia Rating Scale (UDysRS). Patients who complete the 12-week blinded treatment period may have the option to roll into an open-label safety extension study for an additional 12-month treatment period.
Gender:
All
Ages:
Between 30 years and 85 years
Trial Updated:
05/18/2022
Locations: Neuro-Pain Medical Center, Fresno, California
Conditions: Parkinson Disease, Dyskinesia, Drug-Induced, Dyskinesias