View clinical trials related to Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic.
Filter by:To explore the association with TCM pattern and TCM tongue diagnosis for Autoimmune disease and Dry eye syndrome.
This study to examines the impact of anifrolumab on disease activity, immune phenotypes, and development of neutralizing antibodies to quadrivalent influenza vaccine in patients with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE). 10 patients with moderately to severely active SLE will be treated with anifrolumab in addition to standard of care lupus treatments and 10 will receive only standard of care medications. All will receive influenza vaccine.
This clinical trial intends to evaluate the efficacy and safety of intense pulsed light (IPL) in the treatment of facial telangiectasia in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).
This is a randomised, open label, controlled non-inferiority phase III multicentre trial. As primary objective, the study aims to demonstrate that a regimen free of additional oral corticosteroids but with obinutuzumab (and MMF) is non-inferior to a regimen based on oral corticosteroids and MMF in achieving the primary outcome of complete renal response at week 52 without receiving corticosteroids above a prespecified dose. As secondary objectives, the study aims: - To compare the efficacy of the treatments in both arms in terms of: - partial plus complete renal response at week 52; - proteinuria < 0.8g/g at week 52; - extrarenal flares; - response as defined by a >4 points reduction in SELENA-SLEDAI score at week 52. - To compare the safety of the treatments in both arms in terms of occurrence of: - toxicity of corticosteroids; - serious Adverse Events; - serious Infectious Episodes; - new damage. - To compare the number of patients with non-adherence to treatment in both arms. - To estimate the efficiency of obinutuzumab in this indication. The ancillary studies will allow: - To implement a biobank (serum, plasma, DNA, cells and urine) and a bank of renal biopsies for studies that will be part of separate research funding bids (patients will be informed that their samples and data may be used for subsequent studies and offered to consent or not). - To identify which target therapeutic levels of MMF best predicts response with least toxicity (ancillary study). - To have long term data on renal function and damage.
This is a translational study for the identification of epigenetic changes detectable in sera of patients suffering from Systemic Lupus erythematosus. The aim of the study is to analyze whether circulating DNA fragments are 1) different in patients with or without Lupus nephritis and 2) present and detectable in the circulation before the development of Lupus nephritis.
SLE disease in Saudi Arabia is yet not well defined especially in a population with high consanguinity and high inbreeding coefficient . Up until now, there has been no prospective cohort study for SLE patients in Saudi Arabia. As a result, current published literature is focused on retrospective chart reviews which are subjected to many forms of bias. so the investigator proposed this prospective registry which will follow open cohort study design aiming to provide better understanding of disease presentation, course and outcomes especially if complemented by detailed immunological, molecular, genetic and microbiome data.
This is a multi-center, double-blinded, randomized, placebo-controlled, phase 2 study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of sirolimus administered in addition to standard therapy, in patients with active SLE disease.
Lupus nephritis (LN) is one of the main manifestationsin SLE patients, having an important impact on morbidity and mortality. Renal biopsy is the "gold standard" for the diagnosis of LN, however, it is an invasive technique, not free of complications,which is not recommended to be performed serially as a follow-up tool for patients with LN. Searching for biomarkers in SLE has been the subject of interesting research, although results have not always been relevant. Multiple biomarkers have been studied in different locations (soluble markers in blood, urine and biological fluids),of different nature(autoantibodies, genetic markers of "kidney damage") looking atdiagnostic and/orprognostic features. In recent years, several biomarkers have been developed that seek to find an association with pathological patterns, with pathogenic mechanisms and with a non-invasive diagnosis of different glomerulopathies, allowing the identification of prognostic subgroups in each type of kidney disease, while predicting response to treatment and/or recurrence. To date, double-stranded anti-DNA antibodies (anti-dsDNA) and serum complement are the only non-invasive routine biomarkers for monitoring renal activity in patients with LN. However, these markers are only the reflection of the immune activity of the disease and they are not markers of renal damage or poor prognosis. For all the above, the purpose of this study is, in a case-control study, to evaluate simultaneously serum (ANA, anti-dsDNA, anti-C1q, anti-cardiolipin IgG and IgM, anti-ß2GPI IgG and IgM, anti-phosphatidylserine/prothrombin antibodies, and anti-DFS70 antibodies) and urinary biomarkers, and the presence of anti-DFS70 antibodies, in a multiethnic cohort of patients with SLE such as the cohort of GLADEL, and assess its possible correlation with various socio-demographic, clinical and serological manifestations of the disease. In subgroup of patients, transcriptome studies will be performed using RNA from blood and tissue to identify possible transcriptional signatures.
The purpose of this study is to unravel the proportion of monogenic lupus in children onset Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and to find out the diagnostic strategy for early detection of monogenic lupus.
An observational study aiming to assess the serological profile of SARS-Cov2 patients with systemic diseases such as systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjogren syndrome, sarcoidosis, inflammatory myopathies, Behçet's disease, Rheumatoid arthritis and Spondyloarthritis