View clinical trials related to Atopic Dermatitis.
Filter by:Pruritis is a common symptom in patients with atopic dermatitis and psoriasis. Patients with atopic dermatitis and psoriasis often report pruritis-associated sleep impairments and scratching behaviors during nighttime and the negative impact on their quality of life. However, nocturnal scratch behavior and sleep impairment are poorly understood due to the difficulties in quantifying these symptoms in patients' daily lives. This study deploys multiple technologies (polysomnography, video capture, wrist sensors, clinician-reported outcomes, and patient-reported outcomes) to develop and validate a wrist-based solution to quantify nocturnal scratch.
This is a Phase 2a, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study with an open-label extension to evaluate the efficacy and safety of camoteskimab in adults with moderate to severe AD.
The primary objective of this open randomised controlled trial is to assess the add-on effect of EMD-U compared to CAU alone, in improving dermatology-specific quality of life in patients with atopic dermatitis or prurigo nodularis who suffer from severe scratching behaviour. The main study parameter is the difference in treatment effect between EMD-U and CAU at T2, measured with the Skindex-29 symptoms scale. There are five measurement points: T0, T1 after 4 weeks, T2 after 8 weeks, T3 after 12 weeks, and T4 after 6 months. Patients are randomly allocated to either the EMD-U or CAU condition.
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a skin condition that may cause a rash and itching due to inflammation of the skin. Upadacitinib is an approved drug for treating AD. Approximately 1000 adolescents and adult participants who are prescribed upadacitinib by their physician in accordance with local label will be enrolled in up to 40 sites in China. Participants will receive oral upadacitinib tablets as prescribed by their physician according to their routine clinical practice and local label. Participants will be followed up for approximately 12 months. There is expected to be no additional burden for participants in this trial. Participants will attend regular visits during the study at a hospital or clinic according to their routine clinical practice.
This is a two-part study that will evaluate the safety and efficacy of APG777 in participants with moderate-to-severe Atopic Dermatitis (AD). Part A will evaluate the safety and efficacy of one induction dose regimen of APG777 compared to placebo. In addition, two maintenance regimens will be evaluated in Part A. Part B will evaluate the benefit-risk of 3 dose regimens of APG777 compared to placebo. One maintenance regimen will be evaluated in Part B. The study duration for any individual participant will be up to 106 weeks which includes: screening, induction, maintenance, and post-treatment follow-up periods. Participants randomized in Part A are not permitted to participate in Part B.
Biodiversity is essential for nature and human well-being. Land use has reduced biodiversity in cities that is associated with altered commensal microbiota and a rising burden of immunological disorders among urban children. The investigators will estimate how rewilding of kindergarten yards affects commensal microbiome, prevalence of allergies, asthma, atopic dermatitis and infections, cortisol levels, cognitive skills and plasma cytokine levels of children. Our specific aims are: To assess if rewilding diversifies health-associated skin, saliva and gut microbiota and reduces infectious diseases and atopic or allergic symptoms. Assess whether the rewilding has positive effects on cognitive skills. Assess whether the rewilding changes cortisol and plasma cytokine levels. The investigators will recruit altogether 320 (160 per treatment) study subjects aged between 1-5 to questionnaire study (Task 2), from which 120 study subjects will be analyzed more detailed using microbiological and blood samples (Task 1).
The prevalence of atopic dermatitis has increased along with urbanization and biodiversity loss. According to biodiversity hypothesis, the main reason is urban lifestyle and reduced contact to microbial diversity. Previous studies indicate association between atopic dermatitis and exposure to natural microbes in childhood. Sand Play - the Effect of Biodiversity Exposure on Atopic Dermatitis will investigate whether the exposure to microbial diversity in sandbox reduces the symptoms of atopic dermatitis, alters commensal microbiota and modifies immune regulation in children.
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a skin condition that may cause a rash and itching due to inflammation of the skin. Therapies spread over the skin may not be enough to control the AD in trial participants who require systemic anti-inflammatory treatment. This study aims to provide data on the efficacy and safety of upadacitinib at different doses in adult participants with moderate to severe AD. Upadacitinib is an approved drug for the treatment of moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD). This study is conducted in 2 periods. During Period 1, participants are randomly assigned into 1 of 2 groups called treatment arms to receive upadacitinib Dose A or dupilumab Dose A. Based on the participants response to upadacitinib Dose A, they may have their dose increased to upadacitinib Dose B after 2 weeks. In Period 2, participants that completed Period 1 will either remain on their assigned dose or be reassigned to a different dose based on their Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI) response. Approximately 300 adult participants ages 18 to 64 with moderate to severe AD who are current users of dupilumab and had a history of inadequate response to dupilumab will be enrolled at up to 94 sites worldwide. The study is comprised of a 35-day Screening Period, an 8-week Open-Label Period 1 and a 24-week Open-Label Period 2 for participants that completed Period 1. Participants will receive upadacitinib oral tablets once daily or dupilumab subcutaneous (SC) injection every other week for 32 weeks and followed for 30 days. There may be higher treatment burden for participants in this trial compared to their standard of care. Participants will attend regular visits during the study at a hospital or clinic. The effect of the treatment will be checked by medical assessments, blood tests, checking for side effects and completing questionnaires.
This is a randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter phase III clinical study evaluating the efficacy and safety of AK120 injection in the treatment of patients with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis.
This is a low-intervention phase IV trial. The main objective is to optimize the treatment of patients with moderate-severe atopic dermatitis that require systemic treatment after failure, intolerance or contraindication to cyclosporine.