View clinical trials related to Psoriasis.
Filter by:A Pilot, Open-Label Study in Subjects with Mild-to-Moderate Plaque Psoriasis to Investigate the Safety, Tolerability, and Preliminary Efficacy of a Four-Week Multidose Regimen of DLX105-DMP Administered to a Target Lesion
The overall aim of this study is to determine the effectiveness of an interdisciplinary combined clinic intervention compared to usual care in a population of patients with two or more Immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs).
Patients with chronic inflammatory diseases (CID) followed in gastroenterology, dermatology and rheumatology have physiopathological, epidemiological and therapeutic focal points. The pathologies concerned are inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD - Crohn's disease [MC] and ulcerative colitis [RCH]), chronic inflammatory skin diseases (psoriasis or Verneuil's disease) and chronic inflammatory rheumatic diseases (rheumatoid arthritis [RA] and spondyloarthritis [SpA] including psoriatic arthritis [PsA]). Presenting one of these diseases is associated with a higher risk of having a second inflammatory pathology, whether the latter is ophthalmological, dermatological, rheumatological or gastroenterological. An association of extra-articular manifestations is observed in 10 to 30% of patients with SpA, and an association of extra-intestinal manifestations is observed in approximately 30% of patients with IBD. No common database for chronic systemic inflammatory diseases currently exists in France.
GÖTHA- The early arthritis and psoriasis study of Region Västra Götaland, Sweden - is a longitudinal observational study, which will prospectively and in parallel follow patients with newly diagnosed rheumatoid arthritis (RA, N=1000), psoriatic arthritis (PsA, N=500) and undifferentiated arthritis (N=100), together with patients with psoriasis (N=500). The study will also recruit healthy controls from the general population (N=3000). The aims of the study are to define predictors for disease course and severity, treatment response, comorbidities, health related quality of life (HRQoL) and health economy. The study is a collaboration between the department of Rheumatology and the department of Dermatology at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg, and the departments of Rheumatology at the hospitals of Alingsås, Borås, Uddevalla and Skövde, in the west of Sweden. All patients with newly diagnosed RA, PsA and undifferentiated arthritis at the Rheumatology centers are eligible for inclusion. Patients with psoriasis will be recruited from the Department of dermatology at Sahlgrenska University Hospital. The patients will be examined at baseline and at one, three, five and ten years. The assessments will include physical examination with evaluation of joints, entheses and skin and validated questionnaires regarding medical history, comorbidities, lifestyle, disease activity, bodily function, socioeconomic factors and HRQoL. Blood samples will be collected. The patients with arthritis will also undergo radiography of the lung, hands and feet, and Cone Beam Computed Tomography (CBCT) of hands and feet.
This study [4827-005 (post market)] is designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of long-term exposure to brodalumab in subjects with plaque psoriasis (psoriasis vulgaris, psoriatic arthritis) who have completed Study 4827-003 (Study 003) and in subjects with pustular psoriasis (generalized) or psoriatic erythroderma who have completed the Study 4827-004 (Study 004). 4827-005 study was conducted as phase 3 clinical trial until July 4th 2016 (approval date in Japan). After that date 4827-005 study was switched to phase 4 study.
This study was created to provide subjects who complete Week 52 (end of Apremilast Extension Phase) of study CC-10004-PPSO-003 the option to continue to receive open-label apremilast therapy. The study will consist of up to 208 weeks of long-term treatment followed by an 8-week observational follow-up phase.
This is a multiple-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase IIb study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of AK101, an anti-IL-12/23 p40 antibody, when administered subcutaneously, in subjects with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis. The study will consist of 3 periods: up to 4 weeks screening, 12 weeks double-blinded treatment and long-term follow-up period(up to 52 weeks).
Anti-carbamylated protein (anti-CarP) antibodies are present in approximately one-fourth of the patients who are seronegative for both rheumatoid factor and anti-citrullinated protein antibody and who may therefore have psoriatic arthritis. The investigators hypothesized that detection of anti-CarP antibodies in serum may be useful for diagnosis of psoriatic arthritis.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), immunogenicity, pharmacodynamics (PD) and the preliminary efficacy of AK101,an anti-IL-12/23p40 monoclonal antibody, when administered subcutaneously in subjects with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis.
Everybody's skin has bacteria that normally lives on it. Previous research has shown that people with eczema (or atopic dermatitis [AD]) have much higher concentrations of a certain bacteria (S. aureus), especially when their disease is active but little is known about the role that this bacteria plays in psoriasis (i.e. disease severity, biomarkers and skin barrier function). The overarching purpose of this longitudinal study is to understand how the abundance of skin S. aureus (and several commensal bacteria) change as a consequence of standard of care treatment in the URMC dermatology clinics. Other assays and biospecimens will also be collected to address a number of questions.