View clinical trials related to Rheumatoid Arthritis.
Filter by:Growing research evidence supports the effectiveness of mHealth interventions for improving exercise adherence and motivation. The aims of our study are; 1) to develop and design a smartphone application for a structured hand exercise program for patients with RA and to test its usability. 2) Evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of hand exercise app. This study is a mixed-methods study that aims to investigate the effectiveness of the Mar-HandTherapy app: a qualitative and quantitative study with the iterative design approach.
The objective of this study is to identify a panel of immunological molecular and cellular biomarkers able to predict the success of major dose-reduction or discontinuation of abatacept in rheumatoid arthritis patients
Patients with rheumatoid arthritis or spondyloarthritis, currently treated or about to be started with anti-TNF original drug adalimumab or etanercept will be included and randomized to either " information leaflet only " or " information leaflet + nurse information " arms, just before they see their rheumatologist for periodic assessment of disease and treatment. Patients from the " information leaflet only " arm will be distributed individually a dedicated leaflet with written generic informations about the use of biosimilars in rheumatic diseases (individual and societal advantages, pharmaceutical development, scientific efficacy and safety results). Patients from the " " information leaflet + nurse information " arm will be delivered the same leaflet, and additionally offered to have a dedicated individual interview with a specialist nurse, who will orally discuss informations about biosimilars based on a standardized talk, completed by answers to any questions by the patient. The rheumatologist will then propose, unless inappropriate based on clinical evaluation of the patient, a change in the treatment of patients from the original drug to the corresponding biosimilar. The primary outcome will be the observed proportions of patients actually receiving the biosimilar drug at the 6-months follow-up visit in the 2 compared arms. Secondary outcomes will be average time spent by the nurse to adequatley inform the patient, the proportion of patients from the intervention arm who have actually asked for the nurse information interview, and the reasons for refusal of biosimilars, when appropriate.
MySláinte is a 12-week community-based, multi-disciplinary preventive and lifestyle intervention program to reduce CVD risk factors. It includes weekly exercise classes with educational workshops on understanding lifestyle risk factors as well as optimisation of cardiovascular medications. It will be delivered by a multidisciplinary team including: a nurse, dietician, physiotherapist and physician and builds on the previously developed protocols of the successful MyAction program. The MySlainte study aims to expand on the MyAction program by looking at a broader range of patients with chronic disease who have suboptimal lifestyle drivers for many preventable diseases. Importantly, MySlainte also aims to assess if there is a difference in outcome between those who complete the program with their partner compared to those who complete the program alone.
New type of imaging method is in demand clinically for early detection and treatment guiding of RA. Photoacoustic imaging (PAI), a hot spot in medical imaging society, which combines the merits of optical imaging and US and has a capacity in morphological, functional and molecular imaging, has shown potential in visualizing superficial organs, including small joints. The investigators developed a multi-modal photoacoustic/ultrasound (PA/US) imaging system, equipped with a handheld 3D PA/US probe, which wass able to provide 3D volume data of dual-wavelength PA imaging of small joints, in addition to real-time 2D PA/US imaging. The investigators plan to recruit RA patients in different disease conditions and healthy volunteers to receive the 2D and 3D PA/US examination on the 2nd and 3rd MCP, PIP joints and wrist joints using this imaging system, and to evaluate the potential clinical role of the imaging system in RA, and its added value to current imaging methods.
The primary objective of the study aims to compare the biodiversity of intestinal microbiota between spondylarthritis (SPA) or rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients and healthy volunteers, by microbiota DNA sequencing in order to further and respond the prior results, which suggested that there is a specific dysbiosis for each of the 2 diseases. A comparative analysis will allow to identify the biomarkers of the specific bacteria.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a common chronic systemic autoimmune relapsing disease characterized by joint inflammation. Beside arthritis leading to progressive joint damage and loss of function, RA is also associated to extraarticular inflammatory conditions such as interstitial lung disease (ILD). This one develops in 30% of all RA patients with a median survival expectancy of 3 to 10 years once symptomatic. Unfortunately, there is no medical care recommendation so far as the pathophysiology is unknown. However, ILD share many similarities with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Autotaxin (ATX), due to its lysophospholipase activity, produces a bioactive lipid, lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) under inflammation. LPA has pleiotropic actions inducing cell proliferation, survival, motility and differentiation. Increased ATX and LPA levels have been detected in synovial fluid of RA patients and in IPF patients. ATX is also currently the target for a phase 3 clinical trial in IPF. Given the previous described role of ATX/LPA axis in arthritis and inflammation-induced bone loss in RA and the similarities between RA-ILD and IPF, the investigators hypothesized that ATX/LPA axis may be also an attractive drug target for this pulmonary condition in RA and therefore that ATX and LPA may be increased in sputum from RA patients with ILD in comparison with sputum from RA patients without ILD.
The use of anti-interleukin (IL)-6 therapy, including tocilizumab, in rheumatoid arthritis or giant cell arteritis, led to the improvement or even control of disease in some patients for whom no further therapeutic options were available. Nevertheless, the evaluation of the efficacy of these treatments are negatively impacted by the lack of reliable biomarkers. Indeed, usual inflammatory biomarkers used during the follow-up of these patients to detect persistent disease activity or intercurrent infection, such as C-reactive protein, fibrinogen and procalcitonin, are dependant on IL-6. Thse usual biomarkers cannot therefore be reliably used during anti-IL-6 therapy. Some other experimental biomarkers are totally or partially independent of IL-6, or even of inflammasome, and thus are credible candidates for the follow-up of patients treated with anti-IL-6 therapy. Here investigators propose a controlled, prospective, monocentric, observational study evaluating several biomarkers, usual and experimental, in patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis treated with anti-IL-6 therapy. This study will include 25 patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis requiring an anti-IL-6 therapy and 25 healthy controls. In patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis, usual and experimental biomarkers will be assessed at D0, D15, W24 and W52 from the introduction of anti-IL-6 therapy, or during an intercurrent infection. Investigators thus hypothesized that experimental biomarker levels will still be increased at D15, contrary to usual biomarkers dependant on IL-6 which will be normal whereas rheumatoid arthritis is still active based on usual radiological and clinical criteria, and that all biomarkers will be normal a W24.
The study aims to provide evidence on the effectiveness of Harkány medicinal water in psoriatic and rheumatoid arthritis patients using subjective and objective methods. It is a cross-over study, so first half of patients will receive medicinal water, the other half will receive tap water treatment, and after 6 months treatments will be repeated, but patients will receive the other type of water.
Background: RA may progress with articular and non-articular involvement.Depression prevelance is found to increase for RA patients according to healthy population and to be correlated with pain, decreased quality of life, fatigue and physical disability.BDNF level was found significantly lower in RA patients with depression. Aim of this study is to investigate the variation of BDNF levels following acute exercise and potential correlation between BDNF levels and depression. Methods: This study included 30 RA patients and 30 age and sex matched healthy controls.Depression levels were evaluated with Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). Blood samples from all subjects were taken and centrifuged before and immediately after the exercise intervention.