Clinical Trials Unit
Stanford University School of Medicine's Center for Advanced Dermatologic Investigation is the Dermatology Department's clinical trials unit.
The Center is home to 12-15 ongoing clinical studies, investigating the safety and efficacy of new and currently available drugs and over-the-counter medications. The Center works with Stanford's own panel on medical research, leading pharmaceutical companies,and the Food and Drug Administration to safely and ethically expand the medical field's knowledge of dermatologic treatments. New studies begin regularly, and the Center continues to recruit patients with skin aging, sun damage, skin cancer (including basal cell carcinomas), psoriasis, atopic dermatitis, rosacea, and other dermatologic diseases for ongoing studies.
Skin Aging Studies
We seek to understand the human aging processes as it relates to skin on a fundamental level. To this end, our studies focus on clinical and translational research efforts ranging from: (1) the analysis of gene changes which predispose individuals to exceptionally youthful skin to (2) molecular signatures that may be biomarkers for aging skin to (3) the careful study of new candidate agents which might affect the skin aging process.
Nonmelanoma Skin Cancer
Recent advances in our understanding of basal cell skin cancer biology have enabled the development of cutting edge study drugs which combat tumor growth. We are currently home to a number of clinical trials at the forefront of potential therapy for advanced or metastatic basal cell cancer. In addition, we seek to understand the biology of basal cell skin cancers and to identify molecular predictors for treatment success.
Acne Rosecea
This is a common and frustrating chronic inflammatory condition of the face, usually affecting older individuals. The causes of this complex condition are the subject of much study. Our clinical studies seek to identify new topical or oral medications to improve the symptoms of acne rosacea.
Contact
For more information, please email dermtrials@stanford.edu
Featured Clinical Trials
Identifying Best Approach in Improving Quality of Life and Survival After a Donor Stem Cell Transplant in Older, Medically Infirm, or Frail Patients With Blood Diseases
This phase II/III trial studies the best approach in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant in older, weak, or frail patients with blood diseases. Patients who have undergone a transplant often experience increases in disease and death. One approach, supportive and palliative care (SPC), focuses on relieving symptoms of stress from serious illness and care through physical, cultural, psychological, social, spiritual, and ethical aspects. While a second approach, clinical management of comorbidities (CMC) focuses on managing multiple diseases, other than cancer, such as heart or lung diseases through physical exercise, strength training, stress reduction, medication management, dietary recommendations, and education. Giving SPC, CMC, or a combination of both may work better in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant compared to standard of care in patients with blood diseases.
Stanford is currently accepting patients for this trial.
Stanford Investigator(s):
Intervention(s):
- other: Supportive Palliative Care
- other: Clinical Management
- other: Best Practice
- procedure: Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
- other: Questionnaire Administration
- other: Quality-of-Life Assessment
- other: Survey Administration
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Vulnerable patients as defined by one or more of the following criteria
- Age 65 years or older
- Having Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation - Comorbidity Index (HCT-CI) scores of
>= 3 (for patients that could be 20 years old and older)
- Having frailty as determined by walk speed of < 0.8 m/s using 4-meter walk test
(for patients 50 years old and older)
- Patients considered or referred for allogeneic HCT to treat a hematological malignant
or non-malignant disease
- Able to speak and read English - interaction with the interventionist trainer and
endpoint measurement must occur in English
- Willing and able to provide informed consent
- Planned allogeneic HCT within 3 weeks - all types of donors and all sorts of
conditioning regimens are allowed. Patients with suspected active disease (relatively
old disease staging or relatively old intervention) or significant comorbidity (e.g.
suspicious untreated pulmonary nodules) based on prior evaluations, that could delay
the transplant would be considered for enrollment within a tighter window (10-14 days
before allogeneic HCT) to allow for completed pre-HCT work-up evaluations that would
confirm readiness to proceed with transplant
- Able to exercise at low to moderate intensity, specifically taking into consideration
the rare circumstances where subjects are not able to exercise due to either birth
deformity or prior traumatic injury that affects their gait
- Adequate cardiopulmonary reserve, as judged by data from the patient's electronic
medical record as to whether a patient could walk up one flight of stairs, no need for
supplemental oxygen, and/or physician judgment
Exclusion Criteria:
- Orthopedic, neurologic or other problems which prevent safe ambulation and protocol
adherence. Information on prior falls and other recent orthopedic or neurologic
problems will be used to make judgment about protocol eligibility
- Participation in another intervention clinical trial with HRQOL as a primary endpoint
- Planned donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) within 90 days post-transplant
- Planned anti-cytotoxic therapies, other than tyrosine kinase inhibitors or
single-agent monoclonal antibody, or FLT-3 inhibitors within 90 days of
post-transplant unless pre-approved by the protocol principal investigator (PI)
Ages Eligible for Study
20 Years - N/A
Genders Eligible for Study
All
Now accepting new patients
Contact Information
Stanford University
School of Medicine
300 Pasteur Drive
Stanford,
CA
94305
Melanie Gaudinez
650-725-4983
I'm interested
Psoriasis Clinical Trials
Identifying Best Approach in Improving Quality of Life and Survival After a Donor Stem Cell Transplant in Older, Medically Infirm, or Frail Patients With Blood Diseases
This phase II/III trial studies the best approach in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant in older, weak, or frail patients with blood diseases. Patients who have undergone a transplant often experience increases in disease and death. One approach, supportive and palliative care (SPC), focuses on relieving symptoms of stress from serious illness and care through physical, cultural, psychological, social, spiritual, and ethical aspects. While a second approach, clinical management of comorbidities (CMC) focuses on managing multiple diseases, other than cancer, such as heart or lung diseases through physical exercise, strength training, stress reduction, medication management, dietary recommendations, and education. Giving SPC, CMC, or a combination of both may work better in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant compared to standard of care in patients with blood diseases.
Stanford is currently accepting patients for this trial.
Stanford Investigator(s):
Intervention(s):
- other: Supportive Palliative Care
- other: Clinical Management
- other: Best Practice
- procedure: Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
- other: Questionnaire Administration
- other: Quality-of-Life Assessment
- other: Survey Administration
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Vulnerable patients as defined by one or more of the following criteria
- Age 65 years or older
- Having Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation - Comorbidity Index (HCT-CI) scores of
>= 3 (for patients that could be 20 years old and older)
- Having frailty as determined by walk speed of < 0.8 m/s using 4-meter walk test
(for patients 50 years old and older)
- Patients considered or referred for allogeneic HCT to treat a hematological malignant
or non-malignant disease
- Able to speak and read English - interaction with the interventionist trainer and
endpoint measurement must occur in English
- Willing and able to provide informed consent
- Planned allogeneic HCT within 3 weeks - all types of donors and all sorts of
conditioning regimens are allowed. Patients with suspected active disease (relatively
old disease staging or relatively old intervention) or significant comorbidity (e.g.
suspicious untreated pulmonary nodules) based on prior evaluations, that could delay
the transplant would be considered for enrollment within a tighter window (10-14 days
before allogeneic HCT) to allow for completed pre-HCT work-up evaluations that would
confirm readiness to proceed with transplant
- Able to exercise at low to moderate intensity, specifically taking into consideration
the rare circumstances where subjects are not able to exercise due to either birth
deformity or prior traumatic injury that affects their gait
- Adequate cardiopulmonary reserve, as judged by data from the patient's electronic
medical record as to whether a patient could walk up one flight of stairs, no need for
supplemental oxygen, and/or physician judgment
Exclusion Criteria:
- Orthopedic, neurologic or other problems which prevent safe ambulation and protocol
adherence. Information on prior falls and other recent orthopedic or neurologic
problems will be used to make judgment about protocol eligibility
- Participation in another intervention clinical trial with HRQOL as a primary endpoint
- Planned donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) within 90 days post-transplant
- Planned anti-cytotoxic therapies, other than tyrosine kinase inhibitors or
single-agent monoclonal antibody, or FLT-3 inhibitors within 90 days of
post-transplant unless pre-approved by the protocol principal investigator (PI)
Ages Eligible for Study
20 Years - N/A
Genders Eligible for Study
All
Now accepting new patients
Contact Information
Stanford University
School of Medicine
300 Pasteur Drive
Stanford,
CA
94305
Melanie Gaudinez
650-725-4983
I'm interested
Dermatology Clinical Trials
Identifying Best Approach in Improving Quality of Life and Survival After a Donor Stem Cell Transplant in Older, Medically Infirm, or Frail Patients With Blood Diseases
This phase II/III trial studies the best approach in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant in older, weak, or frail patients with blood diseases. Patients who have undergone a transplant often experience increases in disease and death. One approach, supportive and palliative care (SPC), focuses on relieving symptoms of stress from serious illness and care through physical, cultural, psychological, social, spiritual, and ethical aspects. While a second approach, clinical management of comorbidities (CMC) focuses on managing multiple diseases, other than cancer, such as heart or lung diseases through physical exercise, strength training, stress reduction, medication management, dietary recommendations, and education. Giving SPC, CMC, or a combination of both may work better in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant compared to standard of care in patients with blood diseases.
Stanford is currently accepting patients for this trial.
Stanford Investigator(s):
Intervention(s):
- other: Supportive Palliative Care
- other: Clinical Management
- other: Best Practice
- procedure: Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
- other: Questionnaire Administration
- other: Quality-of-Life Assessment
- other: Survey Administration
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Vulnerable patients as defined by one or more of the following criteria
- Age 65 years or older
- Having Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation - Comorbidity Index (HCT-CI) scores of
>= 3 (for patients that could be 20 years old and older)
- Having frailty as determined by walk speed of < 0.8 m/s using 4-meter walk test
(for patients 50 years old and older)
- Patients considered or referred for allogeneic HCT to treat a hematological malignant
or non-malignant disease
- Able to speak and read English - interaction with the interventionist trainer and
endpoint measurement must occur in English
- Willing and able to provide informed consent
- Planned allogeneic HCT within 3 weeks - all types of donors and all sorts of
conditioning regimens are allowed. Patients with suspected active disease (relatively
old disease staging or relatively old intervention) or significant comorbidity (e.g.
suspicious untreated pulmonary nodules) based on prior evaluations, that could delay
the transplant would be considered for enrollment within a tighter window (10-14 days
before allogeneic HCT) to allow for completed pre-HCT work-up evaluations that would
confirm readiness to proceed with transplant
- Able to exercise at low to moderate intensity, specifically taking into consideration
the rare circumstances where subjects are not able to exercise due to either birth
deformity or prior traumatic injury that affects their gait
- Adequate cardiopulmonary reserve, as judged by data from the patient's electronic
medical record as to whether a patient could walk up one flight of stairs, no need for
supplemental oxygen, and/or physician judgment
Exclusion Criteria:
- Orthopedic, neurologic or other problems which prevent safe ambulation and protocol
adherence. Information on prior falls and other recent orthopedic or neurologic
problems will be used to make judgment about protocol eligibility
- Participation in another intervention clinical trial with HRQOL as a primary endpoint
- Planned donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) within 90 days post-transplant
- Planned anti-cytotoxic therapies, other than tyrosine kinase inhibitors or
single-agent monoclonal antibody, or FLT-3 inhibitors within 90 days of
post-transplant unless pre-approved by the protocol principal investigator (PI)
Ages Eligible for Study
20 Years - N/A
Genders Eligible for Study
All
Now accepting new patients
Contact Information
Stanford University
School of Medicine
300 Pasteur Drive
Stanford,
CA
94305
Melanie Gaudinez
650-725-4983
I'm interested
Pediatric Dermatology Clinical Trials
Identifying Best Approach in Improving Quality of Life and Survival After a Donor Stem Cell Transplant in Older, Medically Infirm, or Frail Patients With Blood Diseases
This phase II/III trial studies the best approach in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant in older, weak, or frail patients with blood diseases. Patients who have undergone a transplant often experience increases in disease and death. One approach, supportive and palliative care (SPC), focuses on relieving symptoms of stress from serious illness and care through physical, cultural, psychological, social, spiritual, and ethical aspects. While a second approach, clinical management of comorbidities (CMC) focuses on managing multiple diseases, other than cancer, such as heart or lung diseases through physical exercise, strength training, stress reduction, medication management, dietary recommendations, and education. Giving SPC, CMC, or a combination of both may work better in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant compared to standard of care in patients with blood diseases.
Stanford is currently accepting patients for this trial.
Stanford Investigator(s):
Intervention(s):
- other: Supportive Palliative Care
- other: Clinical Management
- other: Best Practice
- procedure: Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
- other: Questionnaire Administration
- other: Quality-of-Life Assessment
- other: Survey Administration
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Vulnerable patients as defined by one or more of the following criteria
- Age 65 years or older
- Having Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation - Comorbidity Index (HCT-CI) scores of
>= 3 (for patients that could be 20 years old and older)
- Having frailty as determined by walk speed of < 0.8 m/s using 4-meter walk test
(for patients 50 years old and older)
- Patients considered or referred for allogeneic HCT to treat a hematological malignant
or non-malignant disease
- Able to speak and read English - interaction with the interventionist trainer and
endpoint measurement must occur in English
- Willing and able to provide informed consent
- Planned allogeneic HCT within 3 weeks - all types of donors and all sorts of
conditioning regimens are allowed. Patients with suspected active disease (relatively
old disease staging or relatively old intervention) or significant comorbidity (e.g.
suspicious untreated pulmonary nodules) based on prior evaluations, that could delay
the transplant would be considered for enrollment within a tighter window (10-14 days
before allogeneic HCT) to allow for completed pre-HCT work-up evaluations that would
confirm readiness to proceed with transplant
- Able to exercise at low to moderate intensity, specifically taking into consideration
the rare circumstances where subjects are not able to exercise due to either birth
deformity or prior traumatic injury that affects their gait
- Adequate cardiopulmonary reserve, as judged by data from the patient's electronic
medical record as to whether a patient could walk up one flight of stairs, no need for
supplemental oxygen, and/or physician judgment
Exclusion Criteria:
- Orthopedic, neurologic or other problems which prevent safe ambulation and protocol
adherence. Information on prior falls and other recent orthopedic or neurologic
problems will be used to make judgment about protocol eligibility
- Participation in another intervention clinical trial with HRQOL as a primary endpoint
- Planned donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) within 90 days post-transplant
- Planned anti-cytotoxic therapies, other than tyrosine kinase inhibitors or
single-agent monoclonal antibody, or FLT-3 inhibitors within 90 days of
post-transplant unless pre-approved by the protocol principal investigator (PI)
Ages Eligible for Study
20 Years - N/A
Genders Eligible for Study
All
Now accepting new patients
Contact Information
Stanford University
School of Medicine
300 Pasteur Drive
Stanford,
CA
94305
Melanie Gaudinez
650-725-4983
I'm interested
Identifying Best Approach in Improving Quality of Life and Survival After a Donor Stem Cell Transplant in Older, Medically Infirm, or Frail Patients With Blood Diseases
This phase II/III trial studies the best approach in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant in older, weak, or frail patients with blood diseases. Patients who have undergone a transplant often experience increases in disease and death. One approach, supportive and palliative care (SPC), focuses on relieving symptoms of stress from serious illness and care through physical, cultural, psychological, social, spiritual, and ethical aspects. While a second approach, clinical management of comorbidities (CMC) focuses on managing multiple diseases, other than cancer, such as heart or lung diseases through physical exercise, strength training, stress reduction, medication management, dietary recommendations, and education. Giving SPC, CMC, or a combination of both may work better in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant compared to standard of care in patients with blood diseases.
Stanford is currently accepting patients for this trial.
Stanford Investigator(s):
Intervention(s):
- other: Supportive Palliative Care
- other: Clinical Management
- other: Best Practice
- procedure: Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
- other: Questionnaire Administration
- other: Quality-of-Life Assessment
- other: Survey Administration
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Vulnerable patients as defined by one or more of the following criteria
- Age 65 years or older
- Having Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation - Comorbidity Index (HCT-CI) scores of
>= 3 (for patients that could be 20 years old and older)
- Having frailty as determined by walk speed of < 0.8 m/s using 4-meter walk test
(for patients 50 years old and older)
- Patients considered or referred for allogeneic HCT to treat a hematological malignant
or non-malignant disease
- Able to speak and read English - interaction with the interventionist trainer and
endpoint measurement must occur in English
- Willing and able to provide informed consent
- Planned allogeneic HCT within 3 weeks - all types of donors and all sorts of
conditioning regimens are allowed. Patients with suspected active disease (relatively
old disease staging or relatively old intervention) or significant comorbidity (e.g.
suspicious untreated pulmonary nodules) based on prior evaluations, that could delay
the transplant would be considered for enrollment within a tighter window (10-14 days
before allogeneic HCT) to allow for completed pre-HCT work-up evaluations that would
confirm readiness to proceed with transplant
- Able to exercise at low to moderate intensity, specifically taking into consideration
the rare circumstances where subjects are not able to exercise due to either birth
deformity or prior traumatic injury that affects their gait
- Adequate cardiopulmonary reserve, as judged by data from the patient's electronic
medical record as to whether a patient could walk up one flight of stairs, no need for
supplemental oxygen, and/or physician judgment
Exclusion Criteria:
- Orthopedic, neurologic or other problems which prevent safe ambulation and protocol
adherence. Information on prior falls and other recent orthopedic or neurologic
problems will be used to make judgment about protocol eligibility
- Participation in another intervention clinical trial with HRQOL as a primary endpoint
- Planned donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) within 90 days post-transplant
- Planned anti-cytotoxic therapies, other than tyrosine kinase inhibitors or
single-agent monoclonal antibody, or FLT-3 inhibitors within 90 days of
post-transplant unless pre-approved by the protocol principal investigator (PI)
Ages Eligible for Study
20 Years - N/A
Genders Eligible for Study
All
Now accepting new patients
Contact Information
Stanford University
School of Medicine
300 Pasteur Drive
Stanford,
CA
94305
Melanie Gaudinez
650-725-4983
I'm interested
Identifying Best Approach in Improving Quality of Life and Survival After a Donor Stem Cell Transplant in Older, Medically Infirm, or Frail Patients With Blood Diseases
This phase II/III trial studies the best approach in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant in older, weak, or frail patients with blood diseases. Patients who have undergone a transplant often experience increases in disease and death. One approach, supportive and palliative care (SPC), focuses on relieving symptoms of stress from serious illness and care through physical, cultural, psychological, social, spiritual, and ethical aspects. While a second approach, clinical management of comorbidities (CMC) focuses on managing multiple diseases, other than cancer, such as heart or lung diseases through physical exercise, strength training, stress reduction, medication management, dietary recommendations, and education. Giving SPC, CMC, or a combination of both may work better in improving quality of life and survival after a donor stem cell transplant compared to standard of care in patients with blood diseases.
Stanford is currently accepting patients for this trial.
Stanford Investigator(s):
Intervention(s):
- other: Supportive Palliative Care
- other: Clinical Management
- other: Best Practice
- procedure: Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
- other: Questionnaire Administration
- other: Quality-of-Life Assessment
- other: Survey Administration
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Vulnerable patients as defined by one or more of the following criteria
- Age 65 years or older
- Having Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation - Comorbidity Index (HCT-CI) scores of
>= 3 (for patients that could be 20 years old and older)
- Having frailty as determined by walk speed of < 0.8 m/s using 4-meter walk test
(for patients 50 years old and older)
- Patients considered or referred for allogeneic HCT to treat a hematological malignant
or non-malignant disease
- Able to speak and read English - interaction with the interventionist trainer and
endpoint measurement must occur in English
- Willing and able to provide informed consent
- Planned allogeneic HCT within 3 weeks - all types of donors and all sorts of
conditioning regimens are allowed. Patients with suspected active disease (relatively
old disease staging or relatively old intervention) or significant comorbidity (e.g.
suspicious untreated pulmonary nodules) based on prior evaluations, that could delay
the transplant would be considered for enrollment within a tighter window (10-14 days
before allogeneic HCT) to allow for completed pre-HCT work-up evaluations that would
confirm readiness to proceed with transplant
- Able to exercise at low to moderate intensity, specifically taking into consideration
the rare circumstances where subjects are not able to exercise due to either birth
deformity or prior traumatic injury that affects their gait
- Adequate cardiopulmonary reserve, as judged by data from the patient's electronic
medical record as to whether a patient could walk up one flight of stairs, no need for
supplemental oxygen, and/or physician judgment
Exclusion Criteria:
- Orthopedic, neurologic or other problems which prevent safe ambulation and protocol
adherence. Information on prior falls and other recent orthopedic or neurologic
problems will be used to make judgment about protocol eligibility
- Participation in another intervention clinical trial with HRQOL as a primary endpoint
- Planned donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) within 90 days post-transplant
- Planned anti-cytotoxic therapies, other than tyrosine kinase inhibitors or
single-agent monoclonal antibody, or FLT-3 inhibitors within 90 days of
post-transplant unless pre-approved by the protocol principal investigator (PI)
Ages Eligible for Study
20 Years - N/A
Genders Eligible for Study
All
Now accepting new patients
Contact Information
Stanford University
School of Medicine
300 Pasteur Drive
Stanford,
CA
94305
Melanie Gaudinez
650-725-4983
I'm interested