View clinical trials related to Colitis.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine whether BMS-936557 is effective in the treatment of moderate to severely active ulcerative colitis in patients who have had insufficient response and/or intolerance to other medical therapy for ulcerative colitis
To assess the safety and tolerability of multiple subcutaneous doses of AMG 181 in healthy subjects, in subjects with active ulcerative colitis, and in subjects with active Crohn's disease.
This study will assess the safety and efficacy of orally delivered short-term OKT3 in participants with active ulcerative colitis.
This study represents the first investigation of anrukinzumab in patients with active ulcerative colitis (UC) and will evaluate proof of mechanism by changes in the mechanism based biomarker (YKL 40) and pharmacodynamic biomarkers (fecal calprotectin, lactoferrin and hs-CRP). It will provide further assessment of the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics (PK) by administration of multiple intravenous (IV) doses of anrukinzumab.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the relation between sulphide detoxification and butyrate metabolism at the level of gene expression and enzyme activity in ulcerative colitis patients and healthy controls.
This study aims to demonstrate the superiority of budesonide compared to placebo as maintenance therapy in keeping patients in remission over a one-year period
To demonstrate that import Mesalazine (ASACOL®) is non-inferior to the reference drug, marketed Mesalazine, regarding the primary endpoint (rate of non-emergence of bloody stool), in patients with Ulcerative Colitis in remission, treated for 48 weeks.
To demonstrate that import Mesalazine (Asacol®) is non-inferior to the reference drug, marketed Mesalazine, regarding the primary endpoint (reduction of UC-DAI score)in patients with active ulcerative colitis (UC) treated for 8 weeks.
In this study the investigators aim was to investigate the safety and possible efficacy of Profermin® in patients with ulcerative colitis. The investigators also aimed at assessing the usefulness of a new online daily symptom registration system.
MultiStem(r) is a new biological product, manufactured from human stem cells obtained from adult bone marrow or other nonembryonic tissue sources. Factors expressed by MultiStem cells are believed to reduce inflammation and regulate immune system function, protect damaged or injured cells and tissue, promote formation of new blood vessels, and augment tissue repair and healing. MultiStem cell treatment resulted in significant efficacy in a mouse model of Graft versus Host Disease with almost complete reversal of gastrointestinal pathology (similar to pathology that would be expected in Ulcerative Colitis). These data, together with safety data generated in 2 other clinical trials, suggest that MultiStem has the potential to be a new treatment option for patients with ulcerative colitis. This is the first study of MultiStem in this patient population and will cautiously explore the safety/toleration and potential benefit of this new treatment in patients with moderate to severe disease.