National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR)
Trial Pipeline
A Proof-of-Concept Trial on the Effect of Ketamine on Fatigue
NCT04141696
Calibration and Validation of the PROMIS and Neuro-QOL Questionnaires in Cerebral Palsy and Congenital Muscular Dystrophy
NCT02153970
Evaluation and Diagnosis of Potential Research Subjects With Traumatic Brain Injury
NCT01287156
Evaluation and Diagnosis of People With Pain and Fatigue Syndromes
NCT00677157
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia in Chronic Pain Patients
NCT00133601
Improving Asthma Communication in Minority Families
NCT00133666
Wellness Interventions After Transplant Study
NCT00367809
Nursing Intervention for HIV Regime Adherence Among People With Serious Mental Illness (SMI)
NCT00264823
Teaching Children With Asthma and Who Live in a Rural Setting How to Self-Manage Their Asthma
NCT00218803
Phase Distribution
| Phase | Trial count |
|---|---|
| Phase 1 | 2 |
| Phase 2 | 2 |
| Phase 3 | 2 |
Therapeutic Areas
What the Pipeline for National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR) Shows
According to the ClinicalTrials.gov registry, National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR) is linked to 9 US clinical trials across every stage of research activity. Of those, 0 studies are currently recruiting — about 0% of the sponsor's indexed portfolio — and 9 are already marked complete, representing roughly 100% of the total. Recruiting share is one of the more practical signals here: it reflects how much of a sponsor's research is presently open to new participants, while the completed share indicates the depth of finished work that has already contributed registry results. Both counts come directly from the public ClinicalTrials.gov dataset and are refreshed on the registry side; this page mirrors the latest data pull without altering it.
The phase mix for National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR) reports 2 late-stage studies (Phase 3 and Phase 4 combined) and 4 earlier-phase studies (Phase 1 and Phase 2). A portfolio weighted toward Phase 3 usually reflects an organization advancing candidates toward regulatory review, where the research centers on comparative efficacy and broader safety across larger populations. A heavier Phase 1 and Phase 2 tilt generally indicates exploratory work — safety, dosing, and early signal detection — and is common among research-forward sponsors that seed many early programs. Phase 4 entries, when present, track interventions already in real-world use and typically focus on long-term safety, effectiveness across subgroups, or formulation comparisons.
The top therapeutic focus area indexed for National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR) is Asthma with 2 linked trials, and 9 other condition areas appear in the top list above. That distribution is a quick read of where the organization concentrates its research attention; it does not imply product availability, market share, or any clinical endorsement. All numbers on this page come from ClinicalTrials.gov maintained by the National Library of Medicine, and counts can shift as new studies are registered or existing ones update their status. This information is provided for reference and educational purposes only, not as medical, investment, or regulatory advice — verify current details directly with ClinicalTrials.gov before relying on any figure here.
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.