Baylor College Of Medicine
Clinical trials sponsored by Baylor College Of Medicine, explained in plain language.
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Doctors test two ways to fix baby skulls
Disease control TerminatedThis study aimed to compare two versions of a minimally invasive surgery used to reshape the skulls of babies under 6 months old with a condition where a skull bone fuses too early. The main goal was to see if one technique led to better head shape or fewer complications than the…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Baylor College of Medicine • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Apr 02, 2026 14:56 UTC
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Study tests timing of chemo for stomach cancer
Disease control TerminatedThis study aimed to compare two different timing schedules for chemotherapy in people with stomach or gastroesophageal junction cancer. It tested whether giving all chemotherapy before surgery works better than the standard approach of giving some before and some after surgery. T…
Phase: PHASE2 • Sponsor: Baylor College of Medicine • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Apr 01, 2026 14:42 UTC
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Laser surgery offers new hope for kids with untreatable lazy eye
Disease control TerminatedThis study tested if a laser eye surgery called PRK could improve vision in children with a 'lazy eye' caused by a large difference in prescription between their eyes, or a very high prescription in both eyes. It was for children aged 2 to 17 whose vision did not get better after…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Baylor College of Medicine • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Mar 24, 2026 12:02 UTC
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Can Over-the-Counter meds match opioids for Kids' Post-Surgery pain?
Symptom relief TerminatedThis study tested whether common over-the-counter pain medications (ibuprofen and acetaminophen) could provide similar pain relief to opioid-containing medications for children recovering from elbow fracture surgery. Researchers randomly assigned children to receive either opioid…
Phase: PHASE4 • Sponsor: Baylor College of Medicine • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated Apr 02, 2026 14:56 UTC
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Could a simple cream stop painful radiation burns?
Symptom relief TerminatedThis early-stage study tested a cream called Dermaprazole, made from a common heartburn medicine, to see if it could safely prevent or reduce severe skin burns (radiation dermatitis) in breast cancer patients receiving radiation therapy after mastectomy. The main goals were to ch…
Phase: PHASE1, PHASE2 • Sponsor: Baylor College of Medicine • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated Mar 17, 2026 13:09 UTC