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Crohn Disease clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Crohn Disease.

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NCT ID: NCT06100289 Not yet recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

A Study of Vedolizumab in Children and Teenagers With Ulcerative Colitis or Crohn's Disease

Start date: September 30, 2024
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The main aim of this study is to learn how the body of a child or teenager with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis (UC) or Crohn's disease (CD) processes vedolizumab (pharmacokinetics) given just under the skin subcutaneously (SC). The participants will be treated with vedolizumab for up to 34 weeks. During the study, participants will visit their study clinic several times.

NCT ID: NCT06089590 Not yet recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Ibd CAncer and seRious Infections in France (I-CARE 2)

I-CARE 2
Start date: November 15, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a French prospective longitudinal observational multicentre cohort study. Primary objective : to assess prospectively the presence and the extent of safety concerns (cancer, serious infections, arterial and venous thrombotic events) in patients with CD and UC and treated with JAKi, anti-IL23p19, and S1p modulators.

NCT ID: NCT06073288 Not yet recruiting - Crohn Disease Clinical Trials

Unveiling the Microbial Impact on Intestinal Fibrosis

Start date: November 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Crohn's disease (CD), belonging to the class of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, is a chronic inflammatory disorder that may affect any location of the gastrointestinal tract. It is characterized by transmural inflammation and an overwhelming immune response of the gut mucosa, which leads to severe clinical symptoms. More than 50% of CD patients develop a penetrating or stricturing disease due to fibrostenosis, which most of the time requires surgical intervention since no therapies have been found as effective yet. Among the histological features of stricturing CD, the thickening of the muscularis mucosae and muscularis propria is the main hallmark, primarily due to the excessive proliferation of mesenchymal cells and the increased accumulation of a collagen-rich extracellular matrix in the submucosa, caused by multiple mechanisms, including i) the proliferation of existing local fibroblasts, the induction of both ii) epithelial-to-, and iii) endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition. Even if the alteration of these mucosal functions is mainly caused by the continuous tissue injury occurring during CD-associated chronic inflammation, recent reports suggested that CD associated fibrosis may be driven by inflammation-independent triggers, such as microbiota dysbiosis. Shedding the light on this aspect of CD fibrosis may lead to the development of innovative therapeutic strategies eventually blocking the gut thickening.

NCT ID: NCT05974358 Not yet recruiting - Crohn Disease Clinical Trials

KONO-S Anastomosis Compared to Conventional Ileocolonic Anastomosis to Reduce Recurrence in Crohn's Disease

KOALA
Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Crohn's disease (CD) is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) currently affecting one person in a thousand in France. It can lead to numerous digestive complications such as fistulas, abscesses or stenosis. Despite numerous therapeutic advances, the rate of patients requiring surgery remains very high, with approximately 50% requiring at least one surgical intervention at 10 years after disease diagnosis. However, surgical treatment is not curative, the postoperative recurrence rate being very high, from 65 to-90% endoscopic recurrence at 1 year. The ileocolonic anastomosis is the main site of postoperative recurrence currently defined by a Rutgeerts score (≥i2) 6 months after surgery. In 2003, Kono et al. described a new operative technique that could reduce the rate of post-operative recurrence: a termino-terminal ileocolonic anastomosis, anti-mesenteric, with a supporting column to prevent distortion and anastomotic stenosis (Kono-S anastomosis). The study showed no decrease in endoscopic recurrence rate at 1 year (83% vs 79%), but a significant decrease in surgical recurrence rate at 5 years (15% vs 0%). Recently, a randomized Italian monocenter study showed a significant decrease in endoscopic recurrence rate at 6 and 18 months (22.2% versus 62.8% and 25% versus 67.4%), as well as a decrease in clinical recurrence. The limitations of this study are its monocentric nature and the lack of centralization of the endoscopic analysis to assess the primary endpoint. This surgical technique has been performed in some centers for ileocolonic Crohn's surgery since 2020. Nevertheless, the level of evidence remains too low to establish practice recommendations. The KOALA study will be the first prospective, multicenter, randomized study comparing KONO-S anastomosis and conventional anastomosis for ileocolonicresection of Crohn's disease, with blinded and centralized evaluation of recurrence.

NCT ID: NCT05974280 Not yet recruiting - Crohn Disease Clinical Trials

Study on the Treatment of Anal Fistulas Using Alofisel Versus Fat Autologous Stem Cells

CHAZAM
Start date: January 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

One of the newest and most innovative medicinal approaches is cell therapy. Several clinical trials and experimental investigations have looked into the feasibility of treating CD-related fistulas with stem cells. The current indication for ALOFISEL® (active ingredient: Darvadstrocel) is the treatment of difficult perianal Crohn's fistulas that have not responded well to at least one conventional therapy or biotherapy. This brand-new cell therapy medication is created using amplified allogeneic human adult mesenchymal stem cells from adipose tissue (ADSC). The supplier mandates that two patients be booked for a single dose of ALOFISEL® due to the medication's expensive price-roughly €54,000 for a single dose of 120 million-which cannot be stored once thawed. Only one of the two patients receives therapy; the other serves as the backup patient. By doing this, another "back-up" patient who might receive no care at all is avoided. An developing alternate approach to allogeneic ADSC injection for the treatment of complicated anal fistulas in CD is autologous fat injection. In recent years, autologous fat grafts have been the subject of in-depth research. They are popular because it is simple to get clinical samples (lipoaspirate, adipose tissue), and because there are a lot of ADSCs in adipose tissue. Additionally, ADSCs show strong immunomodulatory and regenerative capacities. We would wish to compare the effectiveness of these two injection kinds on perianal fistulas as part of our care of CD.

NCT ID: NCT05972694 Not yet recruiting - Crohn Disease Clinical Trials

Effect of Grapes in Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Start date: July 2, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overall objective of this pilot intervention study is to determine the impact of grape powder (46g/day freeze dried whole grape powder provided by the California Table Grape Commission) on the gut microbiotacomposition in adult patients with the IBD subtype Crohn's disease (CD).

NCT ID: NCT05960864 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Ulcerative Colitis (UC)

Chinese Spondyloarthritis Inception Cohort (CESPIC)

CESPIC
Start date: September 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The Chinese Spondyloarthritis Inception cohort (CESPIC) was started 2000 as a prospective, longitudinal, multicentre, nationwide study in China on patients with early SpA including ankylosing spondylitis (AS, also known as radiographic axial spondyloarthritis) and non-radiographic axial SpA. The objectives of CESPIC are to learn about the course of SpA during the very early stage of the disease, to appropriately assess the outcome including radiographic progression of patients after several years of follow-up, to identify outcome predictors, to assess quality of life, function, and costs (direct and indirect costs). CESPIC has been recently expanded to recruit patients with other forms of SpA / conditions associated with SpA: reactive arthritis, acute anterior uveitis, Crohn's disease as well as with psoriasis / axial psoriatic arthritis.

NCT ID: NCT05842564 Not yet recruiting - Crohn Disease Clinical Trials

Autophagy in Paediatric Crohn's Disease

P-IBDphagy
Start date: June 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Crohn's disease is a multifactorial complex disease resulting in a between microbiota and immune system. Indeed, GWAS (Genome-Wide Association Studies) association study pinpointed polymorphisms as genes susceptibility on more than 200 loci. Among them genes coding for proteins involved in autophagy machinery (i.e: ATG16L1, IRGM et NDP52). Autophagy is a ubiquitous intracellular mechanism mandatory for protein and microorganism recycling. So far, the role of autophagy in gut inflammation and intestinal homeostasis in Crohn's disease patients is partially understand. Then, investigators plan to evaluate, on native cells, the autophagic flux in pediatric patients suffering of a Crohn's disease compare to controls.

NCT ID: NCT05835973 Not yet recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Sleep Changes in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD) Patients.

RECIDREAM
Start date: May 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD) go through two phases: flare and remission. Prediction of flares and identification of patients in remission but at high risk of flare are a major issue when taking care of IBD patients. Considering close interactions between sleep, immunity and intestinal inflammation, sleep disorders could be a predictor of flares. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that sleep efficacy decreases before IBD flare. Patients in remission will be assessed for IBD symptoms (activity scores, biological factors) and sleep disorders (actigraphy, DREEM®, questionnaires) during one year.

NCT ID: NCT05813860 Not yet recruiting - Crohn Disease Clinical Trials

HLADQA1*05 Genotype and the Efficacy of Treatment With Infliximab in Chinese Population Crohn's Disease

Start date: April 30, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Crohn's disease (CD) is a chronic non-specific inflammatory disease of the intestine. Infliximab (IFX) is a kind of one of the anti-tumor necrosis factor agents (anti-TNF) and is the main clinical treatment drug for Crohn's disease, but approximately 30-50% of patients develop a secondary non-response to respond within one year. The main cause of secondary non-response failure is the formation of anti-IFX anti-drug antibodies (ADA). The human leukocyte antigen (HLA) gene is a complex allele that has been associated with susceptibility to a variety of diseases. Studies have shown that HLADQA1*05 allele carriage significantly increases the immunogenicity of anti-tumor necrosis factor agents (anti-TNF) and the risk of ADA formation, resulting in a significant reduction in the efficacy of IFX. Our previous retrospective study found an increased risk of ADA, IFX failure to respond and discontinuation in patients with HLADQA1*05 variants, and that IFX in combination with immunosuppression improved clinical outcomes in wild-type genotype patients, whereas combination therapy in patients with variant genotype did not optimize clinical outcomes significantly. Therefore, we believe that the impact of HLADQA1*05 on the efficacy of IFX in the Chinese population is unclear, and the combination of immunosuppressants in patients with variant HLADQA1*05 genotype remains to be validated due to insufficient sample size. We hypothesized that HLADQA1*05 wild-type CD patients would have better clinical remission when treated with IFX than HLADQA1*05 variant patients and that the combination of immunosuppressants would improve the outcome in wild-type patients but not in variant patients. By advancing this project, we hope to provide high quality evidence on the clinical use of IFX in Crohn's disease in the Chinese population and help physicians to be more selective in the use of IFX alone or in combination with azathioprine, or to switch treatment in a timely manner.