Baylor College Of Medicine
Clinical trials sponsored by Baylor College Of Medicine, explained in plain language.
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Stomach cancer chemo study stopped early – too few volunteers
Disease control TerminatedThis study aimed to see if giving all chemotherapy before surgery (FLOT-TNT) was better than splitting it before and after surgery (FLOT-POP) for stomach or GEJ cancer. Only 3 people took part, and the study was stopped early. Because of this, no reliable conclusions can be drawn…
Phase: PHASE2 • Sponsor: Baylor College of Medicine • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 26, 2026 12:10 UTC
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Laser surgery offers new hope for kids with stubborn lazy eye
Disease control TerminatedThis study tested laser eye surgery (PRK) to improve vision in children aged 2 to 17 with lazy eye (amblyopia) caused by high nearsightedness, farsightedness, or astigmatism. These children had not gotten better with standard treatments like glasses or patching for at least 6 mon…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Baylor College of Medicine • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 26, 2026 12:04 UTC
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Tiny incision, big difference: study tests best way to reshape baby skulls
Disease control TerminatedThis study looked at two ways to perform a keyhole surgery for babies born with a fused skull bone (sagittal craniosynostosis). The surgery aims to allow the skull to grow into a more normal shape. Researchers compared the standard procedure with a version that includes extra cut…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Baylor College of Medicine • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 22, 2026 13:52 UTC
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Skin cream for radiation burns tested but study halted early
Symptom relief TerminatedThis study tested a cream called Dermaprazole to prevent skin irritation (radiation dermatitis) in breast cancer patients after mastectomy. Only 3 women joined before the study was stopped. The goal was to see if the cream was safe and could reduce skin redness, peeling, and swel…
Phase: PHASE1, PHASE2 • Sponsor: Baylor College of Medicine • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 26, 2026 12:04 UTC
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Can Over-the-Counter painkillers replace opioids for Kids' elbow surgery?
Symptom relief TerminatedThis study looked at two common ways to manage pain in children after elbow fracture surgery: opioids versus over-the-counter medicines like ibuprofen and acetaminophen. The goal was to see if non-opioid options work just as well, which could reduce opioid use and risks. The stud…
Phase: PHASE4 • Sponsor: Baylor College of Medicine • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 18, 2026 11:59 UTC