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Adrenal insufficiency

2 published articles · Updated continuously

Clinical Trial Landscape

Clinical Trials for adrenal insufficiency

14 trials tracked for adrenal insufficiency: 6 in phase 3 or 4.

14Trials tracked
6Phase 3 & 4
0Recruiting
0With published results
Phase distribution
Phase 4 2 Phase 3 4 Phase 2 2 Phase 1 1 Other / NA 5
  1. Phase 4 Hydrocortisone Replacement in Patients With Secondary Adrenal Insufficiency (SUPREME CORT) Completed
  2. Phase 4 Evaluation of Efficacy and Hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal Axis Suppression Due to Corticosteroids Intrabursal Injection Completed
  3. Phase 3 Treatment of Adrenal Insufficiency in Children Completed
  4. Phase 3 Extension Study for Patients Entered Into Study Infacort 003 Completed
  5. Phase 3 Is Adrenal Insufficiency Under-diagnosed in Hospitalized Cirrhosis Patients? Completed
  6. Phase 3 Once-daily Oral Modified Release Hydrocortisone in Patients With Adrenal Insufficiency Completed
Show 8 more trials
  1. Phase 2 Pilot Study to Characterize and Examine the Pharmacokinetics and Efficacy of Chronocort® in Adults With CAH Completed
  2. Phase 2 Comparison of Cortisol Pump With Standard Treatment for Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia Completed
  3. Phase 1 An Investigational Study of Hydrocortisone Completed
  4. N/A Pilot Study Assessing Oxidative Stress in Children Completed
  5. N/A Adrenal Suppression and Adrenal Recovery Induced by Megestrol Acetate Completed
  6. N/A Evaluation of Etomidate on Adrenal Function in Trauma Patients Completed
  7. N/A Value of 25 mcg Cortrosyn Stimulation Test Completed
  8. N/A Cortisol Response to Moderate and Deep Sedation in Children Completed

Showing the 14 most-cited and recently-updated of 14 trials. Browse the full registry →

Trial data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov. Counts describe the research landscape and are not a treatment recommendation. Informational only — not medical advice.

HCP Mode — summaries include clinical detail, trial data, and statistical outcomes.
Patient Mode — summaries use plain language, avoiding clinical jargon.