The University Of Queensland
Clinical trials sponsored by The University Of Queensland, explained in plain language.
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Gene-Guided dosing aims to stop deadly fungal infections in cancer patients
Disease control Recruiting nowThis study tests whether using a patient's genetic information to dose the antifungal drug voriconazole can help more patients reach effective drug levels faster. About 104 children and adults with blood cancer and fungal infections will receive either standard dosing or dosing g…
Phase: PHASE2 • Sponsor: The University of Queensland • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 01, 2026 16:01 UTC
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New trial aims to save transplanted kidneys from silent virus
Disease control Recruiting nowThis study tests whether reducing anti-rejection drugs, with or without an extra treatment called IVIG, can better control BK virus in kidney transplant patients. The virus can damage the new kidney and lead to failure. About 280 adults and children who have had a kidney or kidne…
Phase: PHASE3 • Sponsor: The University of Queensland • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Apr 30, 2026 15:49 UTC
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New Needle-Free device could make blood tests safer and less painful
Disease control Recruiting nowThis study tests whether a needle-free blood draw device (PIVO Pro) reduces contamination in blood cultures compared to the usual method. About 1,148 adults in three emergency departments who need a blood culture will be randomly assigned to either the new device or standard coll…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The University of Queensland • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Apr 27, 2026 16:01 UTC
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Donor milk may keep newborns of diabetic moms out of the NICU
Disease control Recruiting nowThis study looks at whether giving pasteurized donor human milk to full-term babies born to mothers with diabetes can prevent low blood sugar and reduce time in the neonatal unit. About 1,444 newborns will be randomly assigned to receive donor milk or standard hospital care for t…
Phase: PHASE4 • Sponsor: The University of Queensland • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Apr 26, 2026 20:01 UTC
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Could a gentler start to home dialysis boost quality of life?
Symptom relief Recruiting nowThis study looks at whether starting peritoneal dialysis (a type of home dialysis) at a lower dose and gradually increasing it is better than the standard full-dose approach. The goal is to see if this method improves quality of life and reduces side effects for people with kidne…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: The University of Queensland • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 01, 2026 15:59 UTC