View clinical trials related to Eczema.
Filter by:This study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of YR001 topical ointment in adult patients with mild to moderate atopic dermatitis
This study will explore potential links between atopic dermatitis and food allergy. This information will be useful to determine atopic dermatitis and food allergy share unique biochemical or genetic identifiers useful for diagnosing and treatments in the future. This is a mechanistic study consisting of obtaining blood and skin samples from participants at baseline. Individuals may also undergo a clinically indicated oral food challenge and have blood and skin samples collected at various times during the oral food challenge. This study will create a molecular map of the pathology of atopic dermatitis and food allergy. This information will be deployed to evaluate the hypothesis that atopic dermatitis and food allergy share unique genetic transcriptional signals in which the study team can then further analyze pathological pathways and cell types.
This study aims to evaluate the safety, efficacy and tolerability of abrocitinib in subjects with moderate to severe chronic hand eczema, and its effects on skin biomarkers using a noninvasive method of tape stripping.
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of lebrikizumab with/without Topical Corticosteroid Treatment in Participants with Moderate-to-Severe Atopic Dermatitis. The study will last approximately 62 weeks.
This is a multi-center, randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 study to evaluate the efficacy, safety, PK, PD and immunogenicity of CM310 in children patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis.
This is a randomized, double-blind study comparing LNK01001 to placebo in participants with moderately to severely atopic dermatitis who were candidates for systemic therapy (ie, patients with a history of inadequate response to topical treatments, those who were using a systemic treatment, or those for whom topical treatments are otherwise medically inadvisable). The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of LNK01001 in adult patients with moderate to severe AD who are candidates for systemic therapy.
CT-100 is a platform that provides interactive, software based therapeutic components that may be used as part of a treatment in future software-based prescription digital therapeutics. One class of CT-100 components are Digital Neuro-activation and Modulation (DiNaMo TM) components. DiNaMo components target key neural systems (including but not limited to systems related to sensory-, perceptual-, affective-, pain-, attention-, cognitive control, social- and self- processing) to optimally improve a participant's health.
This interventional, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study aims to evaluate the effect of a marine by-product hydrolysate supplementation on the reduction of atopic dermatitis symptoms.
This observational (enrollment into the registry while the pregnancy is ongoing) study is being conducted to compare the frequency of major congenital malformation (MCM)s among infants of women exposed to ruxolitinib cream during pregnancy with infants of women not exposed to ruxolitinib cream during pregnancy.
Medication adherence is a poorly studied phenomenon that challenges both patients and physicians. 50% of individuals with chronic disease are not adherent to their medication regimen. Within the United States, non-adherence to medical treatment leads to approximately $100 billion in hospital admission costs. While the issue of adherence is not limited to any particular field of medicine, non-adherence occurs in approximately one-third to one-half of dermatological patients. Non-adherence is of importance as it is a significant cause of treatment failure, resulting in worse quality of life, worse health outcomes, and increased insurance costs.