Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Researchers are trying to determine if withdrawal of budesonide therapy in patients with immune-mediated enteropathies doing well on therapy will result in worsening symptoms, histology, quality of life, and micronutrient/nutritional status when compared to continued therapy.


Clinical Trial Description

This study aims to evaluate patients with small intestinal diseases caused by the immune system (refractory celiac disease type 1, CVID enteropathy, autoimmune enteropathy, and collagenous enteropathy) who have had improvement in symptoms and small intestine healing with oral budesonide. Patients who meet inclusion criteria and agree to enter the study will be included for 12 weeks or until they choose to discontinue or there are concerns for safety. At the beginning of the study, patients will undergo questionnaires, blood draw, urine and stool collections, physical exam, and an upper scope (esophagogastroduodenoscopy) with biopsies from the small intestine. They will then be randomized to either continued therapy on their current dose and formulation of budesonide (medication provided by the study) or to withdrawal of the medication over 2 weeks and then no medication during the study. Daily questionnaire on symptoms will be recorded. Patients will be assessed in the clinical research unit monthly during the study with a questionnaire, physical exam, blood draw, and urine/stool collections. Finally, at the end of the trial (12 weeks) or at the time of withdrawal from the trial, the patients will complete questionnaires, physical exam, blood collection, urine/stool collection, and upper scope (esophagogastroduodenoscopy) with small bowel biopsies. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03866538
Study type Interventional
Source Mayo Clinic
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase Phase 4
Start date September 10, 2019
Completion date October 19, 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04349904 - Near-Focus NBI Classification of Villous Atrophy in Suspected Coeliac Disease: International Development and Validation
Recruiting NCT05581628 - FREQUENCY OF FIBROMYALGIA IN PATIENTS WITH CELIAC DISEASE
Completed NCT04593251 - Dose Escalation Study to Evaluate an Experimental New Treatment (CALY-002) in Healthy Subjects and Subjects With Celiac Disease and Eosinophilic Esophagitis Phase 1
Completed NCT05810441 - Intestinal Transglutaminase Antibodies in Celiac Disease Diagnosis
Recruiting NCT05555446 - Bovine Colostrum to Prevent Absorption of Gluten Early Phase 1
Completed NCT02754609 - Hookworm Therapy for Coeliac Disease Phase 1
Terminated NCT01902368 - Celiac Disease Screening N/A
Completed NCT02312349 - Assessment of Gluten-Free Availability in Elaborated Food Stores in Three Neighbourhoods of Buenos Aires City
Completed NCT02472704 - Lymphocytic Enteritis and Suspected Coeliac Disease: Gluten vs Placebo N/A
Completed NCT01172665 - Celiac Disease Database
Completed NCT01100099 - HLA-DQ2-gliadin Tetramer for Diagnosis of Celiac Disease Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT00639444 - Risk of Celiac Disease and Age at Gluten Introduction N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05425446 - Study of the Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics and Biomarker of DONQ52 in Celiac Disease Patients Phase 1
Enrolling by invitation NCT02202681 - Imaging the Duodenum Using an Optical Frequency Domain Imaging OFDI Capsule N/A
Completed NCT00362856 - Safety and Tolerability Study of Larazotide Acetate in Celiac Disease Subjects Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05135923 - Glutenfree, Gut Microbiota and Metabolic Regulation N/A
Completed NCT05052164 - Improvement Of Physical And Physiological Parameters In Menopausal Or Post-Menopausal Celiac Women N/A
Completed NCT03775499 - Probiotic BL NCC 2705 and Gluten Sensitivity N/A
Completed NCT03707730 - A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo Controlled, Crossover Trial to Evaluate Safety and Efficacy of AGY in Celiac Disease Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05635266 - Tissue Repository Providing Annotated Biospecimens for Approved Investigator-directed Biomedical Research Initiatives