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NIDDK Home : Clinical Research : Obesity

Obesity Clinical Research

Clinical research is patient-oriented research. Research may be conducted in human volunteers or on samples from humans. NIH-funded studies are carefully designed to answer specific medical questions while protecting participants´ safety. Well conducted clinical trials are the fastest and safest way to find improved treatments and preventions for diseases. Clinical trials or interventional trials determine whether experimental preventions, treatments, or new ways of using known therapies are safe and effective under controlled conditions. Observational or natural history studies examine health issues and disease development in groups of people or populations. Understanding Clinical Trials

Multi-site Clinical Trials

Recruiting | Completed | Ongoing - No Longer Recruiting | Follow-up Studies

Clinical Research


Multi-site Clinical Trials


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Ongoing - No Longer Recruiting Completed Top

Follow-up Studies

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Clinical Research

  • Beta Cell Biology Consortium (BCBC)
    The mission of the Beta Cell Biology Consortium (BCBC) is to facilitate interdisciplinary approaches that will advance the understanding of pancreatic islet development and function.

  • Endocrine Pancreas Consortium
    The Endocrine Pancreas Consortium was formed in late 1999 to derive and sequence cDNA libraries enriched for rare transcripts expressed in the mammalian endocrine pancreas.

  • International Type 2 Diabetes Linkage Analysis Consortium
    This consortium is organizing international efforts to combine existing data sets for linkage analysis in an effort to map genes for type 2 diabetes. In addition, the availability of a large number of samples allows for analysis of individual ethnic groups for predominant diabetes susceptibility genes.

  • NIDDK Central Repositories
    The Biosample, Genetics, and Data Repositories have been established to store biosamples and data collected in designated NIDDK-funded clinical studies. The purpose of the NIDDK Central Repositories is to expand the usefulness of these studies by allowing a wider research community to access these materials beyond the end of the study.
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Last Updated: 6/30/2004

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