9 results
Primary: To investigate the effects of 300 mg aliskiren on albuminuria in patients with non-diabeticnephropathy treated with ramipril 10 mg and volume intervention.Secundary: Effects of ramipril and ramipril plus aliskiren. Effects on RAAS…
The primary objective of this study is to determine the effects of aliskiren, as compared to ramipril, on renal hemodynamics in overweight/obese and hypertensive patients.
Main objective: * To evaluate the effect and variation of 3 and 12 months treatment with Aliskeren-based versus amlodipine-based antihypertensive treatment on aneurismal FDG- uptakeExploratory objectives: * To explore the effect of 3 and 12 months…
Primary1. To determine whether treatment with an aliskiren-based regimen (in part combined with amlodipine or hydrochlorothiazide) compared to a non-aliskiren based regimen, both on top of non-study BP lowering agents where applicable, reduces the…
Primary objective: to compare changes in endothelial function in patients with obesity related hypertension after 8 weeks of treatment with aliskiren, moxonidine and HCTZ.Secondary objectives: to compare changes in the following parameters in…
The primary objectives of this study are to test if aliskiren monotherapy is superior or at least non-inferior to enalapril monotherapy (in the entire study population) and/or to test if aliskiren/enalapril combination is superior to enalapril…
The primary objective of this 2 year extension study (CSPP100A2340E1) is to provide additional long-term safety data in this patient population as a post marketing commitment to the EMEA. A secondary objective is to provide additional follow-up data…
To evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of elsubrutinib and upadacitinib given alone or as the ABBV-599 (elsubrutinib/upadacitinib) combination in SLE subjects who have completed the M19-130 Phase 2 study.
To compare event-free survival (EFS) of the experimental treatment arm including ATO/ATRA and idarubicin with standard treatment based on ATRA plus chemotherapy (AIDA regimen).