View clinical trials related to Arthritis.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine whether aminopterin is effective in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
Compare the efficacy of adding small doses of prednisolone (10 mg) daily to the efficacy of adding one of the available anti TNF in the treatment of methotrexate inadequate responder rheumatoid arthritis patient. Hypothesis: Methotrexate + Prednisolone vs. Methotrexate + anti TNF
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a rheumatic inflammatory synovitis characterized by pain and joint swelling as well as thickening synovial (pannus) lesions that are responsible of osteocartilaginous and tendon damage. It evolves in spurts or long and variable intensity interspersed with remissions. The effectiveness of treatment is based on the proportion of patients who achieve a certain degree of improvement over the initial level of various parameters such as response criteria ACR 20, 50 or 70% or EULAR based on the evolution of DAS 28 or DAS 44. These response criteria are now well validated but do not fully take into account the improvement of the patient's condition. In contrast, there is no questionnaire to identify the proportion of patients whose RA worsened between the medical visits. Such a questionnaire is necessary to detect flares outbreaks in daily practice and in randomized clinical trials, follow-up studies or longitudinal studies after drugs marketing to detect a reversal of disease activity. Both STPR group and OMERACT group have each developed such a new self-administered questionnaire (FLARE and OM-RA-FLARE) to detect the flare- in RA patients. The objective of this study is to validate the questionnaires FLARE and OM-RA-FLARE among RA patients using the methodology advocated by the OMERACT in terms of validity (truth), discriminating power (discrimination) and feasibility
This study is a randomized controlled trial designed to examine the efficacy of an educational decision support tool for patients with rheumatoid arthritis who continue to have active disease despite use of traditional disease modifying drugs. The study will take place at Geisinger Medical Center in Danville, PA. Eligible subjects will be identified by the treating physician and those providing consent will be randomized to usual care versus use of the decision support tool.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether baricitinib 4 milligram (mg) once daily (QD) is superior to placebo in the treatment of participants with moderately to severely active Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) who have had inadequate response to or are intolerant to at least 1 conventional disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (cDMARD)(cDMARD-IR [inadequate response] participants) and who have not received a biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD).
The purpose of this study is to determine whether baricitinib 4 milligram (mg) once daily is superior to placebo in the treatment of participants with moderately to severely active Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) who have had an inadequate response to a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor, despite ongoing treatment with conventional disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (cDMARDs).
The purpose of this research study is to determine if a change in inflammation or baseline inflammation seen on the ultrasound is a good indicator of how rheumatoid arthritis patients respond to TCZ 4mg/kg and whether early prediction of dose escalation is possible by utilizing ultrasound inflammatory measures.
This proposal will test the hypothesis that Orencia affects apoptosis and apoptosis related genes/biomarkers in vivo in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients.
An exploratory clinical study to investigate mavrilimumab, an antibody being developed for the treatment of moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, an inflammatory condition that affects the joints versus a different antibody whose mechanism works by inhibiting tumor necrosis factor.
This multicenter, open-label, single-arm extension study will evaluate the long-term safety of tocilizumab (RoActemra/Actemra) in participants with Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA). Participants who have completed the MA21488 (NCT00810199) core study and the ML21530 (NCT00754572) study and who could benefit from the study drug, according to the opinion of the investigator, will receive 8 milligram per kilogram (mg/kg) of intravenous (IV) tocilizumab every 4 weeks. The anticipated time on study treatment is 104 weeks.