University of Houston

47 total trials 38 currently recruiting 9 completed

Trial Pipeline

RECRUITING NA

Low Level Light Therapy & Skin Pigmentation

NCT07173530

RECRUITING NA

Reducing Obesity Through Play Among Toddlers: Tiny Steps to Health (TSHS) Study

NCT06918821

RECRUITING NA

Emergent Bilinguals: Child Language Proficiency and Language of Treatment

NCT06866223

RECRUITING NA

Improving Independent Multi-joint Arm Control After Stroke

NCT06523335

RECRUITING NA

The Relationship Between Child Language Proficiency and Language of Treatment on the Outcomes of Bilingual Children with Developmental Language Disorder

NCT06085300

RECRUITING NA

A Mobile Intervention for Black Individuals Who Engage in Hazardous Drinking

NCT06416059

RECRUITING NA

MISC-IPV: a Community-Based Intervention for Children Traumatized by Intimate Partner Violence

NCT05948631

RECRUITING NA

Ethnic Microaggressions and Smoking Behaviors Among Latinx Adults

NCT05490927

RECRUITING NA

Personalized Feedback Intervention for Latinx Drinkers With Anxiety

NCT05246202

RECRUITING NA

Human-Machine System for the H2 Lower Limb Exoskeleton

NCT02114450

COMPLETED NA

Comparing Sports Bra Design in Full Busted Women

NCT05456594

COMPLETED NA

Attention and Achievement: A Mind Wandering Investigation

NCT05296252

COMPLETED NA

Brief Religious Alcohol Intervention

NCT04075773

COMPLETED NA

Resistance Exercise to Improve Flu Vaccine for Older Adults

NCT03736759

COMPLETED NA

Effects of a Warm-up on Immune Response to Exercise

NCT04868136

COMPLETED NA

The Effect of a Scleral Lens on the Anterior Chamber Depth and Minimum Rim Width

NCT03926975

COMPLETED NA

Defocus Induced Changes on Choroidal Thickness

NCT03954886

COMPLETED NA

Personalized Feedback for Smokers With Elevated Anxiety Sensitivity

NCT03382093

COMPLETED NA

Motivating Recruitment and Efficacy in Normative Feedback Interventions

NCT04639882

What the Pipeline for University of Houston Shows

According to the ClinicalTrials.gov registry, University of Houston is linked to 47 US clinical trials across every stage of research activity. Of those, 38 studies are currently recruiting — about 81% of the sponsor's indexed portfolio — and 9 are already marked complete, representing roughly 19% 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 University of Houston reports 0 late-stage studies (Phase 3 and Phase 4 combined) and 0 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 University of Houston is Anxiety with 3 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.

Related

Data sourced from official U.S. government datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainTrial Editorial