View clinical trials related to Colitis, Ulcerative.
Filter by:The study is planned as a randomised control trial to study the adjuvant use of antibiotics (ceftriaxone and metronidazole) to achieve a clinical response in hospitalised patients with acute severe ulcerative colitis
Colonoscopy is considered crucial for the diagnosis and quantification of ulcerative colitis (UC). However, there are several drawbacks related to the invasiveness, procedure-related discomfort, risk of bowel perforation (especially in the period of acute inflammation), and relatively poor patient acceptance. Most patients regard the necessary bowel cleansing as burdensome. Feasible, accurate and well accepted non-invasive diagnostic techniques are needed for the determination of inflammatory activity and optimal tailoring of therapy. Hybrid PET/MRI represents an innovative combination of two established, non-invasive diagnostic tools: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), allowing for anatomic-functional imaging of the abdomen at high soft tissue contrast and positron emission tomography (PET) utilizing 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) a non-invasive tool to monitor glucose metabolism and allowing a detection and quantification of inflammatory processes. Since MRI has limited sensitivity in UC and may be hampered by retained stool, a combination with another imaging modality is very appealing. PET, on the other side provides functional information, yet with limited anatomical landmarks and is relatively unsusceptible to artifacts associated to retained stool. In combination, these modalities might provide a valid alternative for the non-invasive assessment of the inflammatory activity in UC patients without the need for bowel purgation. It will therefore have to be investigated whether fecal material does impede the diagnostic quality of the combination of FDG-PET and MRI. For this purpose, the investigators will include 50 patients with confirmed ulcerative colitis. Dependent on clinical activity of the inflammation, patients will be randomized to undergo PET/MRI enterography either with or without prior bowel purgation followed by a colonoscopy. Inflammatory activity in 7 bowel segments will be analyzed based on PET/MRI with and without bowel purgation with the results of colonoscopy as standard of reference. Patient acceptance of PET/MRI with and without bowel purgation as well as colonoscopy will be compared. PET/MRI with and without bowel cleansing will be compared with regard to diagnostic accuracy as well as for its patients' acceptance in comparison to colonoscopy. The investigators hypothesize that PET/MRI will eventually be highly accurate to detect and monitor inflammatory activity in patients with ulcerative colitis. Additional information about extra-intestinal findings might also change the therapeutic concept. PET/MRI might serve as a non-invasive diagnostic option in patients with UC to quantify inflammatory activity especially when bowel cleansing or colonoscopy is not applicable.
This is a Phase IIa (proof of concept), randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of daily PBF-677 oral treatment during 28 days in Ulcerative colitis (UC) patients who are not receiving immunosuppressants and present mild-to-moderate activity of the disease. Enrolled patients would receive standard high doses of 5-ASA (4g), according to current clinical guidelines, and are randomized to receive also PBF-677 or placebo.
Proactive therapeutic drug monitoring of Anti-TNFs with drug titration to a therapeutic window is associated with favorable long-term therapeutic outcomes in IBD and may be superior to reactive therapeutic drug monitoring. Moreover, many exposure-response relationship studies have shown that higher serum anti-TNF drug concentrations are associated with better clinical outcomes in IBD, suggesting that it is maybe time to go from a 'treat-to-target' to a 'treat-to trough' therapeutic approach. In this scenario, there are very limited data regarding therapeutic drug monitoring with golimumab in UC and even no data regarding a therapeutic window to target for important objectives outcomes like mucosal healing and histological remission.
Phase IIb study to evaluate the efficacy and the safety of 3 dose-levels of ABX464, administered daily in patients with moderate to severe Ulcerative Colitis.
BACKGROUND: Previous studies of short-term surgical outcomes after preoperative exposure to anti-TNF therapy in ulcerative colitis (UC) patients who have undergone IPAA have been conflicting. We sought to determine whether preoperative exposure to anti-TNF therapy affects histological measures of fibrosis in the colorectum, which may be a potential factor in adverse anastomosis complications following IPAA surgery. METHODS: Individuals who received infliximab as maintenance therapy and who received their last dose within 180 days of the first stage of IPAA were selected. The control group comprised UC patients who were not exposed to anti-TNF therapy, matched by age, sex, BMI, disease duration, albumin levels, and post-operative leak outcome. Hematoxylin and eosin- (H&E) and trichrome-stained slides from the most distal, well-oriented, full-thickness section of colorectum from each patient's total colectomy specimen were evaluated. Blinded assessment of the degree of fibrosis in the lamina propria, the submucosa, the submucosa immediately adjacent to the muscularis propria, and the subserosa was performed by a single observer using a semi-quantitative pictorial scale.
This is a phase I-II study with the herbal formulation (HF2) for treatment of active ulcerative colitis This will be a two-stage study: Stage 1 will comprise an open label single arm exploratory study of 10 active ulcerative colitis (UC) patients investigating oral HF2 therapy for induction of remission in outpatients with active UC. Active disease is defined as (SCCAI) score ≥5 and a score of ≥2 in the modified Mayo endoscopic sub-score. Clinical remission is defined as a SCCAI score of ≤2 The patients will receive HF2 therapy for 4 weeks. Stage 2: If clinical response (defined as a drop of ≥3 points of the SCCAI score ) is achieved in ≥ 3 patients and no significant safety signals will emerge, the investigators will proceed to a prospective pilot randomized placebo-controlled study. Patients will be randomized into one of two arms: HF2 once daily or placebo formulation (2:1 proportion) for 8 weeks. The primary outcome for stage 2 is a co-primary outcome of clinical response (reduction in SCCAI of ≤3 OR achievement of clinical remission defined as SCCAI ≤2) coupled with an objective evidence of response (Mayo score improvement of ≥1 or 50% FcAL reduction) at week 8. Patients clinically responding at week 8, will be eligible to continue in an 8-weeks extension study to receive either placebo or 1.5gr/day curcumin alone until week 16, as per their original allocation. Exploratory analysis of outcomes for the extension study will include the percentage of patients in clinical remission (SCCAI≤2) and the percentage of patients who maintained clinical response (reduction in SCCAI of ≥3 point compared to week 0).
7 patients with active Ulcerative Colitis are treated with 25 multi-donor FMT Capsules daily for 50 days.
The purpose of this study is to describe treatment patterns associated with first-line and second line biologic use (vedolizumab or other biologic) and to describe the real-world clinical effectiveness of the use (first-line and second line) vedolizumab versus other biologics at least 6 months post-treatment initiation.
The purpose of the study is to confirm that V565 enters inflamed tissue, binds to TNF and reduces inflammation after oral dosing to patients with IBD.