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Colitis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03724175 Recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

The Role of Secondary Bile Acids in Intestinal Inflammation

Start date: August 26, 2019
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The cause of Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is unknown, but intestinal bacteria-involved in the production of molecules that impact health-are widely accepted to play a key role. A significant proportion of IBD patients with pouches (surgically created rectums after the diseased colon is removed) continue to have inflammation similar to their previous disease. Only a few microbes are known to have the capability to modify primary bile acids (PBAs) made by the liver to secondary bile acids (SBAs). SBAs are some of the most common metabolites in the colon and play key roles in several diseases. In this study the investigators will investigate if ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) may reduce inflammatory markers and improve quality of life (as assessed by validate survey) in those subjects with active antibiotic refractory or antibiotic dependent pouchitis.

NCT ID: NCT03720002 Completed - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

HF2 Therapy in the Treatment of Active Ulcerative Colitis

Start date: May 29, 2019
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

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).

NCT ID: NCT03716388 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Ulcerative Colitis Chronic Moderate

Fecal Microbiota Therapy Vs 5-aminosalicylates for Induction of Remission in Newly Diagnosed Mild-moderately Active UC

Start date: December 1, 2018
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Ulcerative colitis is a chronic idiopathic inflammatory disease of the colon that is characterized by abdominal pain and bloody diarrhea. The pathogenesis of UC involves a complex interplay of genetic factors, immune dysregulation and environmental triggers. Conventional therapies for UC (including 5-aminosalicylates, corticosteroids, azathioprine or 6-mercaptopurine and biologics) focus on altering the immune response by suppression of immune cells. However, the primary pathogenic mechanism underlying UC maybe gut microbiota dysbiosis and a dysfunctional intestinal barrier resulting in an aberrant host immune response. Several studies have shown reduced microbial diversity in UC patients with under representation of anti-inflammatory phyla (Bacteroides and Firmicutes), and a relative increase of pro-inflammatory phyla (Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria). Motivated by this, therapies targeting intestinal dysbiosis (prebiotics, probiotics, synbiotics and fecal microbiota transplant (FMT)) have thus been tried in patients with UC. Though several case series and subsequently four high quality randomized controlled trails have established the efficacy of FMT in induction of remission in active UC, all these studies have used it as an add-on therapy, along with the previously ongoing conventional therapies. The investigators aim to assess the safety and efficacy of FMT as the sole modality for induction of remission in patients with newly diagnosed active UC.

NCT ID: NCT03711006 Completed - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

The Effect of Fecal Microbiota Transplantation in Ulcerative Colitis

Start date: February 1, 2017
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

7 patients with active Ulcerative Colitis are treated with 25 multi-donor FMT Capsules daily for 50 days.

NCT ID: NCT03710486 Completed - Crohn Disease Clinical Trials

A Study to Observe Vedolizumab and Anti-tumour Necrosis Factors (Anti-TNFs) Outcomes in Real-world Biologic Ulcerative Colitis (UC) and Crohn's Disease (CD) Participants

EVOLVE-IBERIA
Start date: February 19, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

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.

NCT ID: NCT03705117 Completed - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Open-label V565 Target Engagement Study

Start date: May 23, 2017
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

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.

NCT ID: NCT03698812 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Ulcerative Colitis in Remission

A Multicenter Prospective Cohort Study on the Clinical Prognosis of Ulcerative Colitis

Start date: January 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Mucosal healing or histological remission is an important target for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease. In this study, patients with mucosal healing are defined as a control group, observing their clinical outcomes for 3 years, and describing the recurrence rate. The secondary objective is to study the operative rate, glucocorticoid utilization rate, treatment escalation rate, hospitalization rate and incidence of related complications.

NCT ID: NCT03698500 Recruiting - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Specific microRNAs as Potential Biomarker for Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Start date: January 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to assess the ability of miR-320a and other specific microRNAs to follow the disease course in patients with Crohn`s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), and to distinguish both entities, infectious colitis and healthy controls. Furthermore, the accuracy of miRNA-320a to distinguish CD or UC from irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) should be evaluated . The study is designed as a single center non-randomised prospective trial.

NCT ID: NCT03695185 Completed - Clinical trials for Ulcerative Colitis (UC)

A Study to Investigate How Well Ravagalimab (ABBV-323) Works and How Safe it is in Participants With Moderate to Severe Ulcerative Colitis Who Failed Prior Therapy

Start date: March 26, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Study M15-722 is a Phase 2a study to investigate the efficacy and safety of Ravagalimab (ABBV-323) in participants with moderate to severe UC who failed prior therapy.

NCT ID: NCT03689673 Completed - Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Study of the Effectiveness of ETIASA® (Sustained Release 5-Aminosalicylate) in Maintenance Treatment of Ulcerative Colitis (UC)

Start date: April 24, 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of the protocol is to assess the effectiveness of Etiasa® for preventing relapse in Chinese patients with quiescent UC.