Studies
Current Endometriosis Research
Understanding endometriosis requires access to reliable, up-to-date research. This section is for those who want to explore the evidence behind current knowledge — including ongoing and completed studies, opportunities to participate in research, and a structured view of how the scientific landscape is developing.
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Studies you can join
Clinical studies seeking participants
EndoSolve
OnaWave Medical is developing a novel, non-invasive and painless method for faster diagnosis of endometriosis through analysis of subtle bioelectric rhythms in the pelvis. Built on research from University of Galway and supported by the European Innovation Council.
NOVA – Vipoglanstat (Phase 2)
A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 2 trial by Swedish biotech Gesynta Pharma investigating Vipoglanstat, a non-hormonal and non-opioid compound, for endometriosis-associated pain. Approximately 190 women aged 18–45 are being enrolled across multiple European centers to evaluate efficacy, safety, and optimal dosing.
Endogreet
A potential non-hormonal treatment approach using Tigovit, a green tea extract, in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study at MedUni Vienna. Green tea extract has shown promise in reducing both pain and inflammation around endometriosis lesions.
1 publication
Psychiatric comorbidity among women with endometriosis: nationwide cohort study in Sweden
PMID: 32112731Feb 26, 2020
Endopaedia Knowledge Map
Visual representation of curated scientific papers across research categories
Bubble size reflects number of papers. Double border indicates recent additions.
Mechanisms
45 papers(+1 new)
Natural Compounds
36 papers
Pain & Sensitization
22 papers
Drugs & Pharmaceuticals
20 papers
Diagnostics & Biomarkers
18 papers
Comorbidities
14 papers
Surgical Techniques
11 papers
Epidemiology
10 papers
Genetics & Genomics
8 papers
Interventions
8 papers
Microbiome
7 papers
Fertility & Reproduction
4 papers
Devices & Physical Care
2 papers
Research Network
Connections between papers based on shared MeSH keywords
Each dot is a published study. Studies that share research topics are connected by lines — the more topics in common, the stronger the connection. Clusters reveal where science is most active and how different areas of endometriosis research are interrelated. Hover over any dot to view the paper title.