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Colitis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05684484 Not yet recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Role of Roflumilast in Ulcerative Colitis

Start date: February 1, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to investigate possible efficacy and safety of Roflumilast in adult patients with ulcerative colitis disease .

NCT ID: NCT05680883 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Ulcerative Colitis Flare

Local and Systemic Immunoprofiling of Patients Diagnosed With Ulcerative Colitis

ImmUniverse
Start date: May 5, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Immune-mediated diseases are extremely diverse - patients with the same diagnosis may see the disease progress in very different ways, and respond differently to treatments. This is because the course of the disease is influenced by multiple factors, including the patient's genes, immune system, environment, and the microbes living in their gut. Furthermore, all of these factors interact with and impact on one another. As a result, it is very hard to predict how the disease will develop in a specific patient, and which treatments will be effective. Hence, mechanistic understanding of this heterogeneity and biomarkers predictive for disease control and therapy response over time are important prerequisites of a future precision medicine in IMIDs. ImmUniverse has been formed as a European transdisciplinary consortium to tackle these unmet needs and to understand the role of the crosstalk between tissue microenvironment and immune cells in disease progression and response to therapy of ulcerative colitis (UC) and atopic dermatitis (AD). The consortium will combine analysis of tissue-derived signatures with "circulating signatures" detectable in liquid biopsies, employing state-of-the-art profiling technologies to provide new validated diagnostics in IMID that are expected to improve patient management, lead to increased patient well-being and will significantly reduce the socioeconomic burden of these diseases. This study, being Immuniverse work package 5 (WP5), will verify the disease pathway -and mechanism signatures identified in the multi omic discovery WP2 in immune cells in affected tissue and peripheral blood. WP5 aims to further substantiate our understanding of the immune-mediated intestinal disease ulcerative colitis (UC). It will use liquid biopsies (peripheral blood) and affected UC gut inflamed and non-inflamed biopsies to generate transcriptome, proteome, DNA-methylome and miRNA signatures of immune cell subsets and analyse the association between immune cells circulating in peripheral blood and the microenvironment of affected colonic tissue. Also this WP aims to develop a protocol to analyse and sort living immune cells from cryopreserved tissue. Ultimately, the project's findings should contribute to a better, more precise diagnosis for patients; and better information on how severe the disease is likely to be for each individual patient and how it will progress over time. Finally, the project will make it easier for doctors and patients to monitor how well a treatment is working in the future.

NCT ID: NCT05679622 Recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Fecal Microbiota Transplantation in Pediatric Ulcerative Colitis (UC)

FMT
Start date: December 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study included two topics: one was to test the efficacy and safety of fecal microbiota transplants plus partial enteral nutrition (PEN) in refractory pediatric UC where conventional therapy has failed, and the other was to explore the efficacy and safety of FMT plus PEN as first-line therapy for pediatric active UC

NCT ID: NCT05673278 Recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Non-Invasive Monitoring Through Bowel Ultrasound in Paediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease Study

NIMBUS
Start date: May 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Rates of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are increasing rapidly in children and young people, and targets for management are becoming more demanding, with better control of disease to prevent complications, cancers and surgeries. This project "Non-Invasive Monitoring Through Bowel Ultrasound in Paediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease" or NIMBUS study will aim to explore the possibility of using ultrasound to examine inflammation in this group. Monitoring inflammation in this population currently is done with regular endoscopy (camera tests) and/ or MRI enterography scans which are invasive, can be uncomfortable, expensive and may have long waiting lists. These studies also require bowel prep, in the form of laxative medicines which can be distressing and cause time off from school. Direct visualisation through ultrasound could allow better monitoring of disease, and is quick, accurate, non-invasive and relatively low-cost. This could also allow for more appropriate medication use and a decrease in over/under use of medicines. This study will aim to recruit 50 children and young people with inflammatory bowel disease. Each child will have an ultrasound scan after enrolment and the investigators will use the information from these scans, as well as routine blood tests (already taken in normal care) and follow up medical information to explore the use of ultrasound in this group. The investigating team will aim to contribute to the global discussion around this topic and if results are positive will aim to improve monitoring for this population managed at the Noah's Ark Children's Hospital for Wales.

NCT ID: NCT05672199 Recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Long-term Safety and Efficacy of Efavaleukin Alfa in Participants With Moderately to Severely Active Ulcerative Colitis

Start date: April 28, 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of efavaleukin alfa in participants with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis (UC).

NCT ID: NCT05668013 Recruiting - Crohn Disease Clinical Trials

A Study to Evaluate the Long-Term Effect of TEV-48574 in Moderate to Severe Ulcerative Colitis or Crohn's Disease

Start date: January 11, 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The primary objective of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of 2 different maintenance dose regimens of TEV-48574 subcutaneous (sc) administered every 4 weeks (Q4W) in adult participants with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Secondary objectives of the study are to: - evaluate the efficacy of 2 different maintenance dose regimens of TEV-48574 sc administered Q4W in adult participants with IBD - evaluate the safety and tolerability of 2 different maintenance dose regimens of TEV-48574 sc administered Q4W in adult participants with IBD - evaluate the immunogenicity of 2 different maintenance dose regimens of TEV-48574 sc administered Q4W in adult participants with IBD The total duration for a participant in the double-blind period only is 66 weeks; and for a participant in the open-label extension (OLE) period, up to an additional 268 weeks.

NCT ID: NCT05666960 Recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

R-3750 in Patients With Mild to Moderate Ulcerative Colitis

Start date: February 27, 2023
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this study is to determine the safety and tolerability of orally taken probiotic (R-3750) in patients with mild to moderate ulcerative colitis. Patients will take an oral dosage of probiotic (R-3750) and provide patient-reported and physician scored measures of their colitis. Blood and fecal evaluations of inflammation and assessment of probiotic (R-3750) on fecal levels will also be measured.

NCT ID: NCT05663775 Not yet recruiting - Diarrhea Clinical Trials

Prophylactic Mesalamine to Prevent Colitis Following Treatment With Ipilimumab/Nivolumab (Ipi/Nivo)

IMPACT 1
Start date: December 2024
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The study team's principal interest is to address the question, "Will prophylactic treatment with mesalamine reduce the incidence and severity of immune-related diarrhea occurring secondarily to treatment with ipi/nivo?"

NCT ID: NCT05663671 Not yet recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Evaluate Established Anti-DEFA5 mAbs Diagnostic Efficacy and Safety in IBD

Start date: June 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Investigators propose to validate efficacy and safety of the detection of DEFA5 in the diagnosis of the colonic IBD using longitudinal vs. cross-sectional studies of known patient clinical data to correlate with their endoscopy biopsy data. 30% of colonic IBD patients cannot be accurately diagnosed (CC vs. UC) in a timely manner even when a state-of-the-art classification system of combined clinical, endoscopic, radiologic and histologic tools are used. When the diagnostic classification for these two diseases is inconclusive, the condition is termed indeterminate colitis (IC). Here, the central medical challenge is the discrimination of IBD into the specific subtypes with high accuracy, as it greatly effects surgical care of patients. Diagnostic accuracy of IC into either authentic UC or CC is of utmost importance when determining a patient's candidacy for RPC-IPAA surgery, the standard curative surgical procedure for UC. Further, incorrect diagnosis and treatment carry potential morbidity from inappropriate and unnecessary surgery and costs. The success outcomes of RPC-IPAA surgery and convalescence depend on correct diagnosis. To address IBD diagnosis ambiguity and delays in IBD clinical settings, investigators developed a proteomic signature to discriminate between UC and CC patients that also will predict the outcome of IC patients for their eventual progress to either UC or CC. Our published data has shown robust evidence supporting presence of human alpha-defensin 5 (DEFA5) in areas of the colon mucosa with aberrant expression of apparent Paneth cell-like cells (PCLCs) or crypt cell-like cells (CCLCs), which identifies an area of colonic ileal metaplasia, consistent with the diagnosis of CC. DEFA5 bioassay discriminated CC and UC in a cohort of all IC patients with accuracy. A fit logistic model with group CC and UC as the outcome and the DEFA5 as independent variable differentiator with a positive predictive value of 96%. These findings were obtained solely from colectomy specimens for both the discovery and validation analyses. Investigators believe that use of endoscopy biopsies would be indifferent, which is the purpose of this prospective patient centered clinical study. Investigators propose to demonstrate that UC and CC, the two unsolved medical subtypes of pathology with no drugs for a cure, can accurately be distinguished molecularly by examining CCLCs-secreted DEFA5 in colonic endoscopy biopsies instantly. Our proposal is highly innovative, as it highlights the robustness of DEFA5 and its clinical relevance to IBD is both in science and the anticipated impact, as investigators seek to better understand difficulty to determine 'subtypes" and translate that to improve diagnosis, treatment, clinical outcomes, and quality of life for patients and the realm of clinical care. DEFA5 immunoreactivity in colonic endoscopy biopsies could be a rapid potential diagnostic signature to resolve IC into authentic UC and CC with a first clinic endoscopy biopsy. IC is likely to be eliminated for good.

NCT ID: NCT05662059 Recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Respiratory-gated Auricular Vagal Afferent Nerve Stimulation (RAVANS) Study in Ulcerative Colitis

Start date: January 12, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Prospective, single-center, sham-controlled, double-blinded 12-week study designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the RAVANS device in subjects with Ulcerative Colitis. The goal of the study is to distinguish sham (no stimulation) versus treatment (stimulation) response and to identify treatment responders. The study will last 12 weeks with in-clinic visits at 0 weeks and 12 weeks, and a telehealth-visit at week 6. Additionally, unscheduled visits may occur based on the needs of the subject or at the discretion of the investigator. Subjects will be randomized 2:1 to treatment or sham, and will stimulate at home twice per day.