View clinical trials related to Arthritis.
Filter by:The goal of this N-of-1 study is to learn about treatment for individual patients who have rheumatoid arthritis (RA,) for which many treatments are available. The treatments are different in how they work, the way they are given, side- effects, and cost. While treatment guidelines are available, finding the best treatment order of treatments is often based on physician choice. The main question this study aims to answer are: - What are the effects of different treatments on RA symptoms and condition for each individual patient - What is the effectiveness of different treatments across all patients enrolled in the N-of-1 study Participants will be enrolled and randomized to a sequence of three U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved RA medications: 1. adalimumab, 2. sarilumab, and 3. upadacitinib. Participants will be asked to complete questionnaires about their condition and quality of life weekly (either in clinic or remotely) and report their level of pain daily (remotely).
This is a post-marketing surveillance on MiniMAX Stem
In rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients, the diagnosis of Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) was made based on clinical findings and physical examinations. Then, the cross-sectional areas of the participants' median nerves from different levels were measured. Meidolateral and anteroposterior diameter were measured at the level of the carpal tunnel inlet. Flattening ratio was calculated. wrist to forearm ratio and wrist to forearm difference were calculated. The obtained data were compared between RA with CTS, RA without CTS and healthy control.
Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA), the most common rheumatologic chronic disease in children, is defined as arthritis persisting for at least 6 weeks with no known cause in a patient under the age of 16. The term JIA is an umbrella that includes very different diseases. The current International League of Associations for Rheumatology (ILAR) classification divides JIA patients into 7 categories based on number of involved joints and time of involvement, presence of systemic symptoms, psoriatic findings and spondyloarthritis. This classification groups together patients with different disease and divides patients with the same disease. In the first case, unifying distinct diseases could lead to undifferentiated therapeutic choices, moving away from the modern concept of therapeutic personalization. In the second case, similarities between paediatric and adult arthritis could not be found. This involves both a loss of collaboration with the adult rheumatologist and the difficulty in accessing possibly effective therapies approved only for adult arthritis. In clinical practice, it is increasingly evident that the number of affected joints and the speed of joint involvement are not useful criteria for defining the type and severity of disease. Joint counts lead to underestimate the importance of joint distribution in the identification of distinct forms of arthritis. A recent study found that patterns of joint involvement represent prognostic features, so grouping patients by joint pattern and degree of localization may help clinicians tailor treatments based on predicted disease trajectories. Another important point to differentiate some forms of arthritis is the presence of enthesitis and tenosynovitis. Sometimes tendon inflammation can be not clinically evident, so ultrasound evaluation is useful to detect it. Musculoskeletal ultrasound (MSUS) has been used worldwide by adult rheumatologist, but it is beginning a useful tool also in patients with JIA. Recent studies underline the important role of MSUS findings to assess disease activity and assist disease classification. In recent years, the need has emerged to replace the ILAR criteria with a new nomenclature based on the disease biology. This approach could help clinicians to choose a personalized therapeutic strategy for patients with arthritis.
The aim of this randomised, double-blind, placebo controlled clinical food trial is to determine if the medical food SBD121 Synbiotic (prebiotic and probiotic) will aid in the dietary management of symptoms of early rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
The overall objective of this proposal is to test version 3.0 of the Arthritis smartphone app in a 12-month interrupted time series analysis (ITSA) design which will allow us to observe possible differences in visit frequency between the pre-and post-intervention periods as well as between the concurrent control group and those who receive the app. Our central hypothesis is that introduction of the app will reduce visit numbers per month in the group receiving the app, compared with a concurrent control group.
The goal of this open label multicenter randomized controlled pragmatic superiority trial is to investigate the optimal treatment/tapering strategy with rituximab for patients with rheumatoid arthritis. The main questions it aims to answer are: - What is the optimal treatment/tapering strategy for rituximab in patients with rheumatoid arthritis in terms of reducing patient reported disease impact? - What is the optimal treatment/tapering strategy for rituximab in patients with rheumatoid arthritis in terms of therapeutic efficacy? Participants will be randomized to one of two study arms: - Tapering based on disease-activity guided dose reduction (experimental arm) - Tapering based on interval prolongation (active comparator arm)
Many people develop joint pain, stiffness and swelling due to their cancer treatment that targets the immune system. The severity of symptoms ranges from mild to debilitating and sometimes requires delaying or stopping cancer treatment. The usual plan is to discontinue cancer treatment and give relatively high doses of a medication called prednisone (a steroid, which is an anti-inflammatory medication which may suppress the immune system), with a gradual lowering of the dose over several weeks. While this can be effective, prednisone can cause several side effects, and it is not known if this is the best or safest treatment. Hydroxychloroquine is a medication being studied on IMPACT 2.0 on participants who develop inflammatory joint pain while taking cancer treatments that affect their immune system. It is possible that the hydroxychloroquine treatment may not work well on some participants on IMPACT 2.0. Hydroxychloroquine is also given as standard of care to participants with this type of inflammatory joint pain. The goal of this study is to learn how well methotrexate is at treating inflammatory joint pain in participants from IMPACT 2.0 that don't do well on treatment with hydroxychloroquine and in patients given hydroxychloroquine as standard of care to treat this type of inflammatory joint pain caused by taking cancer treatments which target their immune system.
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the immediate analgesic effect and patients' evaluation of the treatment of cheek acupuncture in patients with acute gouty arthritis. The main question it aims to answer are: Does cheek acupuncture has immediate pain relief effects on patients with acute gouty arthritis. Participants will received cheek acupuncture for 30 mins. If there is a comparison group: Researchers will compare etoricoxib group to see if cheek acupuncture is superior to etoricoxib for improvement of acute pain in subjects with acute gouty arthritis.
The goal of this observational study is to learn about the drug compliance of patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis and, to figure our factors that affect the compliance. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Medication use and compliance in children with chronic diseases is an important problem, but do patients with JIA really use their medications in harmony? - Does the level of adherence to medications affect the quality of life of patients with JIA? Participants will be asked to fill the demographic form which includes personal information and nutritional habbits, Morisky Drug Compliance Scale - 8 and the pediatric quality of life inventory forms, with attending researcher Yesfa Sebnem Ozbay, M.D. This study is not an interventional study.