View clinical trials related to Eczema.
Filter by:Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic, relapsing, inflammatory skin disease that has potential for profound and far-reaching effects on all aspects of children and their families lives, significantly reducing the quality of life. Atopic dermatitis typically appears in infancy and nowadays is affecting up to 10-30% of children and 2-10% of adults. Diminished skin barrier is the essential factor that plays a role in the initiation, consolidating and exacerbating AD. Treatment options for AD typically address skin barrier protection or inflammatory components of disease. Proper care using mild and appropriately formulated emollient preparations may provide significant benefits. In investigators prior study, more than half of pharmacy-derived emollient preparations contained potential contact haptens listed in the European baseline series (EBS), used in diagnosing contact dermatitis. The primary aim of this study is to demonstrate the efficacy of regularly applied emollient in an atomiser (in the form of oil-in-water emulsion) in maintenance therapy, in children presenting from mild to moderate atopic dermatitis. In this study 3 visits are planned (for a period of 4 weeks). During each visit investigators will evaluate transepidermal water loss (TEWL), capacitance of outer areas of the stratum corneum as an indirect assessment of skin hydration. Moreover, investigators will assess three-them-severityIndex and the Children's Dermatology Life Quality Index (CDLQI). The product that participants will use in the study, was prepared at investigators request, in collaboration with the cosmetics company, which according to investigators knowledge at present, will not be benefited from the audit. The following described study project (prospective clinical trial, uncontrolled, open-label) will be conducted within the framework of the statutory tasks of the Department of Pulmonology and Allergology of Children Medical University of Warsaw and is a non-commercial project.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of ALDH2 mutation in radiation associating dermatitis or mucositis in head and neck cancer patients who accept chemoradiation therapy
This is a phase 2 study to investigate the safety and efficacy of PAC-14028 cream in Atopic Dermatitis patients.
The main objective of the trial is to evaluate the efficacy of 2 dose regimens of dupilumab compared to placebo, administered with concomitant topical corticosteroids (TCS), in adult patients with severe AD who are not adequately controlled with, or are intolerant to, oral Cyclosporine A (CSA), or when this treatment is currently not medically advisable. The secondary objective is to assess the safety and tolerability of 2 dose regimens of dupilumab compared to placebo, administered with concomitant TCS, in adult patients with severe AD who are not adequately controlled with, or are intolerant to, oral CSA, or when this treatment is currently not medically advisable.
This is a phase 1 and 2 study to assess the safety and efficacy of PAC-14028 cream in children with atopic dermatitis.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of PF-06817024 in healthy volunteers, in participants with chronic rhinosinusitis, with nasal polyps and in participants with moderate-to-severe Atopic Dermatitis
This is a 13 week randomized, double blind, parallel group, in home use study among approximately 60 male and female subjects, ages 12 to 65 years old inclusive, with atopic dermatitis (AD) SCORAD >16. Treatment group assignments will be balanced by disease severity, age, and body location of AD lesions. The study will consist of a 1 week washout phase and 12 week treatment phase. During the washout phase, subjects will be provided with a bar soap for bathing and showering and must refrain from using any other products on their body (excluding the face) including topical corticosteroids, ointments, lotions, sunscreens, etc. During the treatment phase, subjects will be randomized to 1 of 4 test legs. Throughout the treatment phase, the subjects will be required to use only the provided bar soap for bathing and showering and will apply their test product twice per day, once in the morning and once in the evening. No additional creams, moisturizers, lotions or cleansers other than those provided will be permitted for the duration of the study. Normal facial or hair care products are permitted, however, they must not contain anti-bacterial ingredients (e.g. antidandruff shampoo, acne products, etc). SCORAD, EASI and PGA will incorporate whole body assessments. However, at the Baseline visit, subjects will have an active inflammatory lesion site and adjacent non-lesion, non-inflammatory site identified and marked for all instrumental and biopsy evaluations at Baseline and subsequent visits. Instrumental evaluations, imaging, expert visual grading and self-assessments will be performed throughout the study. Tolerability will be evaluated by incidence of AE's (defined per CTCAE), exacerbation of AD lesions, application site reactions/infections, and lab evaluations throughout the study. There will be additional consumption and compliance checks as well as dermatologic evaluations to ensure the subject's condition does not become extensively worse at each visit. A subset of subjects will have 2mm punch biopsies collected from the designated lesion and non-lesion sites at 3 time points throughout the study. The subset of subjects will be determined by subject willingness to participate in the biopsy portion as well as dermatologic evaluation and determination of biopsy candidacy.
The purpose of this study is to obtain information concerning the safety and effective use of a protective barrier film in patients experiencing severe incontinence associated dermatitis.
A Double-Blind Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of the "Атопик Soothing Cream" in Children with Mild to Moderate Atopic Dermatitis
Patients with atopic dermatitis and eczema often struggle with habitual scratching that is not well-controlled even with optimal medical therapy. Our goal is to create a behavioral intervention to help children with eczema reduce scratching. The investigators hope that the intervention will improve clinical outcomes and quality of life, as well as provide an easily implemented way for clinicians to educate patients and parents about behavioral modification techniques.